Displaying 151 - 175 of 2531
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Blog post
Clearing the Air: How New Rules for Oil & Gas Facilities Offer Major Wins for the Environment and Economy
June 7, 2024 | Lauren Beatty, High Meadows Postdoctoral Economics FellowThis blog post was authored by Lauren Beatty, High Meadows Postdoctoral Economics Fellow and Aaron Wolfe, Senior Economics and Policy Analyst. Methane pollution caused by oil and gas production in the U.S. is a major contributor to climate change and releases health-harming pollution into nearby communities. New EPA rules are projected to slash methane emissions from …More on:
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Blog post
Building a better grid: The latest steps to deliver reliable, affordable and clean power
June 6, 2024 | Ted Kelly, Director and Lead Counsel, U.S. Clean EnergyMany of us don’t realize how much of our livelihoods depend on a reliable electricity grid, until we lose power in a blackout or outage. For many communities across the country, that is becoming a more common occurrence as we experience more frequent and severe storms and heat waves worsened by climate change. Just last …More on:
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Blog post
Why food companies must act now to protect public funding for climate-smart agriculture
June 5, 2024 | Katie Anderson, Senior Director, Business, Food and ForestsThe reauthorization of the farm bill, which offers critical funding to support farmers and food businesses, is currently being debated in Congress. This is a crucial moment to support farmers and businesses—and major food companies need to make sure they take advantage of it. What is at stake? Billions of dollars in funding intended to …More on:
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Blog post
Stronger Standards, Better Monitoring Will Protect Communities from Toxic Pollution
June 4, 2024(This post was co-authored by EDF analyst Jolie Villegas) The Environmental Protection Agency’s recent updates of the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards include several steps that provide substantial public health benefits by reducing toxic air pollution from coal plants. In our last blog post we wrote about one of those steps – closing the “lignite …More on:
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Blog post
Why food companies must act now to protect public funding for climate-smart agriculture
June 4, 2024Food companies can use their voice in Washington to safeguard essential Farm Bill funding to mitigate agricultural emissions and protect food supply chains. -
Blog post
Revisiting the first OpenET Applications Conference: how satellite-based data is transforming water, farm, and forest management
May 31, 2024 | Rachel O’Connor, Senior Manager, Climate Resilient Water SystemsThis spring, hundreds of scientists, engineers, water managers, farmers and ranchers gathered in New Mexico to share and learn about how OpenET data is being used to advance water resources management. OpenET has radically improved access to data on evapotranspiration (ET) — or how much water plants and other vegetation consume. The result has been …More on:
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Blog post
Three ways to make home buyouts more efficient
May 31, 2024Voluntary home buyouts,can facilitate the relocation of residents out of increasingly flood-prone communities. But unfortunately, existing federal programs are slow and require local governments to meet complex and challenging guidelines. Innovative approaches are needed to make buyouts more efficient. Here are three strategies that can help. The post Three ways to make home buyouts more efficient first appeared on Growing Returns.More on:
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Blog post
Bonn 2024: Laying the Groundwork for Global Climate Action from Baku to Belém
May 31, 2024 | Juan Pablo Hoffmaister, Associate Vice President, Global Engagement and PartnershipsAuthored by Juan Pablo Hoffmaister, Associate Vice President for Global Engagement at Environmental Defense Fund The international climate community is convening in Bonn, Germany, for the 60th sessions of the Subsidiary Bodies of the UNFCCC this June—and they will set the tone for the next year of global climate engagement. The sessions in Bonn are …More on:
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Article
Farmers and scientists dig into the climate power of soil
May 30, 2024 | Emily Oldfield, Agricultural Soil Carbon ScientistThe ground beneath our feet holds more carbon than the Earth's atmosphere and all its plants combined. Scientists are investigating how to keep it there.More on:
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Blog post
California’s second carbon market auction of the year raises revenue at critical time for climate funds
May 30, 2024 | Caroline Jones, Senior Analyst, U.S. ClimateThis blog was co-authored by Sara Olsen, Project Manager, California Political Affairs Results of the latest Western Climate Initiative auction were released today, showing continued demand for allowances and confidence in the long-term stability of this landmark program. This auction is expected to generate roughly $1.1 billion for the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund (GGRF), which …More on:
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Blog post
Climate Policy News You Can Use — May 2024
May 30, 20242-year anniversary of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) - we reflect on the wins and address some of the challenges ahead.More on:
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Blog post
Transition finance for net zero is lagging. The UK has an opportunity to lead, but appropriate guardrails are needed
May 30, 2024UK TFMR Secretariat has an opportunity to develop strong market standards to channel private finance towards real world decarbonisation.More on:
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Blog post
Colorado again leads the way with methane verification protocol
May 29, 2024 | Nini Gu, Regulatory & Legislative Manager, West RegionBy Nini Gu Developing more accurate emissions inventories with real-world measurement data of oil and gas climate pollution is key to verifying our progress toward addressing climate change. Earlier this month, the Colorado Air Pollution Control Division achieved a major breakthrough to do just that when it finalized its Greenhouse Gas Intensity Verification Protocol, marking …More on:
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Blog post
New research could help resource managers improve the health and resilience of the Mississippi River Basin
May 28, 2024 | Kelly Suttles, Senior Research Analyst, Climate-Smart AgricultureEnvironmental Defense Fund and co-authors released new research that may prove beneficial to resource managers, aimed at evaluating and implementing actions to improve the Mississippi River Basin’s overall health and resilience. Based on this research, we are sharing a comprehensive framework that can be used to effectively manage the Mississippi River Basin. The post New research could help resource managers improve the health and resilience of the Mississippi River Basin first appeared on Growing Returns.More on:
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Blog post
Building resilience in small island states: what to expect at the 4th SIDS conference
May 24, 2024 | Daniel Whittle, Associate Vice President, Resilient CaribbeanBy Daniel Whittle Chronic power outages, food disruptions and climate-related disasters have become commonplace across the Caribbean. But amidst these challenges, there’s room for optimism. Increased funding, growing awareness, supportive policies and community leadership offer an opportunity for rebuilding and strengthening resilience in the Caribbean and small island developing states, or SIDS, around the world.More on:
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Blog post
Closing the enteric methane emissions innovation gap: A call for funding high-quality research
May 23, 2024 | Peri Rosenstein, Senior Scientist, Livestock SystemsBy Peri Rosenstein and Nicole Jenkins Methane emissions are a potent greenhouse gas, warming the climate more than 80 times faster than carbon dioxide on a 20-year timescale. Rapidly and significantly reducing methane is the most effective way to reduce the rate of warming, especially over the next few decades. Agriculture is responsible for 40%More on:
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Blog post
One year ago, the U.S. Supreme Court rolled back federal wetland protections. Here are the impacts so far.
May 23, 2024 | Adam Gold, Manager, Coasts and Watersheds ScienceOne year ago, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a decision that significantly reduced federal wetlands protections, leaving America’s wetlands at greater risk of development and degradation. The case of Sackett v. EPA was decided 9-0 in favor of the Sacketts, a couple from Idaho that filled in wetlands to build on their property near Priest …More on:
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Blog post
Advanced methane technologies can strengthen new landfill pollution limits
May 20, 2024 | Edwin LaMair, Attorney, U.S. Legal & Regulatory(This post was co-authored by EDF’s Peter Zalzal) When organic waste ends up in landfills, it produces methane — a powerful climate pollutant —as it decomposes. In the U.S., landfills are our third largest source of methane and a major driver of climate change. They also emit large amounts of health-harming and even cancer-causing pollution,More on:
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Blog post
Here’s what the Advanced Clean Trucks rule means for Illinois manufacturers
May 17, 2024 | Neda Deylami, Manager, Vehicle ElectrificationBy Neda Deylami Misinformation about zero-emission vehicles and confusion around federal Environmental Protection Agency standards versus those states can adopt under the Clean Air Act waiver has left many manufacturers, small businesses and fleet managers wondering what market-based policies like the Advanced Clean Trucks rule could mean for their operations and bottom line. The …More on:
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Blog post
Research supports health benefits of ACT for Chicago Metro communities
May 16, 2024 | Neda Deylami, Manager, Vehicle ElectrificationBy Neda Deylami. This blog was co-authored by José Acosta-Córdova, Senior Transportation Policy Analyst at LVEJO Transportation accounts for almost one-third of Illinois’ greenhouse gas emissions — the sector responsible for the most GHG emissions in the state. Medium- and heavy-duty vehicles, such as delivery vans, transit buses and large tractor-trailers are a disproportionate contributor …More on:
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Blog post
We urgently need pollution limits for hydrogen facilities
May 15, 2024 | Edwin LaMair, Attorney, U.S. Legal & RegulatoryThe Environmental Protection Agency has now finalized a wide array of standards to protect people and the climate from dangerous pollution. Those standards cover some of the largest polluting sectors in the U.S., including oil and gas production, power plants, and cars and trucks. But there’s another source of dangerous pollution that still isn’t subject …More on:
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Blog post
Electrifying Medium and Heavy-Duty Vehicles: A Critical Step Towards Environmental Justice in North Carolina
May 15, 2024 | Marilynn Marsh-Robinson, Director, Partnership & Outreach, Vehicles & FreightAs the impacts of climate change reveal themselves to North Carolinians in the form of heat, flooding, wildfires, drought, and increasingly intense and more frequent tropical storms, the case for urgent action to combat climate change is strengthening. Our state has made important strides, setting vehicle electrification goals and power sector emissions reductions directives, but …More on:
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Fact sheet
5 facts that set the record straight on electric vehicles in the U.S.
May 15, 2024EDF's electric vehicle experts assembled these facts to counter the lobbyists who want to make sure Americans keep paying at the pump.More on:
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Blog post
Biden Announces $3B to Replace Lead Pipes – More Money Going to States with Greatest Need
May 9, 2024 | Roya Alkafaji, Manager, Healthy CommunitiesBy Lindsay McCormick, Senior Manager, Safer Chemicals and Roya Alkafaji, Manager, Healthy Communities What’s New? President Biden recently announced $3 billion in federal funding for lead service line replacement. In the third year of this historic $15 billion investment through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to replace harmful lead pipes across the U.S., there is an …More on:
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Blog post
Financing Solutions for Slow Onset Climate Challenges: Drawing on Nature’s Untapped Potential
May 8, 2024 | Juan Pablo Hoffmaister, Associate Vice President, Global Engagement and PartnershipsWhile it may be convenient to place slow onset events like biodiversity loss on the backburner, financing climate solutions now is a more cost-effective approach in the long run. By embracing creative financial mechanisms and harnessing the power of nature-based approaches, we can pave the way for a more resilient tomorrow.More on: