7,000 Species, 200 Nautical Miles and YOU

Published by Ocean Conservancy Let’s create the world’s largest protected marine area, ever. The Northwestern Hawaiian Islands are home to one of the most remote and fragile ecological areas in the world, called Papahānaumokuāke. Four years ago, President Obama expanded the Papahānaumokuāke Marine National Monument to protect 50 nautical miles that provide sanctuary to sea turtles, […]

Sometimes Market Forces Work

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Most of my experience over the past 40 years shows that the market forces they teach you about in Economics 101 don’t work when it comes to energy efficiency. Just about every day our team hears new examples of efficiency options that make great sense economically but are […]

State to EPA: Don’t Leave NY with a Dirty Hudson River

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Sometimes you have to face facts, even if the truth isn’t pretty. That’s essentially what New York State Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Conservation, Basil Seggos, wrote today in a strongly worded letter to the U.S. EPA regarding the cleanup of the massive amounts of toxic chemicals […]

A Call for More Diverse Public Lands

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Mount Rainier National Park iStock The 84 million acres’ worth of parks and monuments the National Park Service has set aside in the public trust over the past century is a source of national pride and cause for celebration. But while we look back on 100 years of […]

Diverse Coalition Backs Proposed Flood Protection Rule

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Devastation of the flood in downtown Cedar Rapids, Iowa, June 13, 2008 The U.S. Army/Flickr (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Oscar M. Sanchez-Alvarez/Released) From Ellicott City, Maryland to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, recent floods have devastated our local communities, destroying businesses, washing away homes, and most tragically, […]

The Problem of Ocean Trash

Published by Ocean Conservancy Written by Tori Glascock Each year an estimated 8 million metric tons, or 17 billion pounds, of plastic flows into the ocean. Enough is enough. First and foremost, an endless flow of trash into the ocean will affect the health of humans and wildlife alike as well as compromise the livelihoods that depend […]

Extreme weather threatens monarch butterfly habitat

Published by the World Wildlife Fund Extreme weather is now a primary driver of forest degradation in key wintering habitat for monarch butterflies in Mexico, according to a new report. Excessive winds and storms that knocked down trees played a significant role in the degradation of 178.7 acres of forest in the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve […]

Passing Climate Bills Will Help Clear Up California’s Smog

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund If California lawmakers are looking for yet another reason to pass Senate Bill 32 (Pavley) and Assembly Bill 197 (E. Garcia), which would reduce climate-changing pollution to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and put new emphasis on measures that protect public health, they need only breathe […]

Green Banks: Easing India’s Clean Energy Finance Barriers

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Co-authored with Eric Weiner, Schneider Fellow, NRDC and Nehmat Kaur, India Representative. Momentum is building as India moves towards meeting its nationally determined climate targets and becoming a leader in clean energy. India’s Power Minister Piyush Goyal recently announced that India’s solar installed capacity crossed 8 gigwatts (GW), […]

These Images Remind Us How Buildings Aren’t Designed with Birds in Mind

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund “Impact (American Redstart)” Miranda Brandon The summer is flying by, and soon birds will start heading south for the winter. Sadly, many of them will have their trip cut short by a building. Collisions with windows are one of the leading threats to migratory birds, killing up to […]

California: Pulling Together for Climate Action Now

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Wherever I go, I am proud to call California home. Not only is our state home to the tallest, oldest and biggest trees on earth, the people here are amazing – diverse, resilient and always busy building a better tomorrow.  California, long an environmental trendsetter, is blazing the […]

The Food That Once Saved Condors May Now Be Poisoning Them

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Nathan Rupert Life must have been pretty cushy for condors back in the Pleistocene. As connoisseurs of rotting flesh, these ancient buzzards would have had their pick of giant sloths, giant tortoises, giant armadillos, and the “giant” versions of myriad other hulking beasts. We’re talking about a time […]

“There’s So Much Need”: Louisiana’s Looming Health Crisis

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund It’s one thing to read scientific reports about the mental health impacts of climate and weather disasters and quite another to watch those impacts play out in real time on your Facebook feed. I used to live in Louisiana—first in Baton Rouge, and then in Lafayette—and my work […]

National Energy Use of Pay-TV Set-Top Boxes is Heading Down

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Since 2012, U.S. consumers have saved more than $1 billion on their utility bills, thanks to energy efficiency improvements made in the new cable, satellite, and telephone set-top boxes placed in their homes by service providers like Time Warner Cable, AT&T, and Direct TV. Bringing down the national […]

A village in Alaska just voted to relocate

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Your browser doesn’t support Javascript or has it disabled. onEarth works best with Javascript enabled. A village in Alaska just voted to relocate – For the second time, the 600 people who live in Shishmaref want to move to the mainland to escape the threat of rising sea […]

By end of century most cities will be too hot for summer Olympics

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Your browser doesn’t support Javascript or has it disabled. onEarth works best with Javascript enabled. There will be very few cities at the end of the century that will be able to hold the summer Olympics as we know them today. —John Balmes, a professor of public safety […]

Latin America Green News: August 10 – 17, 2016

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Brazil’s senate approves Paris Agreement, Energy leads private investment in Chile, Malaria makes a comeback in Venezuela To get the weekly Latin America Green News blog delivered directly to your email, subscribe here. Featured: Venezuela’s Public Health Crisis As if Venezuela’s recent economic collapse, public health crisis, energy […]

Fight Back Against Marine Debris

Published by Ocean Conservancy Written by Senator Cory Booker.  Every 60 seconds, what amounts to roughly a garbage truck full of plastic makes its way into the ocean.  That means that over the next year about 8 million tons of plastic will enter the ocean, creating a massive amount of marine pollution. It’s estimated that if […]

Energy Efficiency Can Accelerate Economic Growth

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Both political candidates claim that America needs to accelerate economic growth. This is accepted as a worthy goal by Paul Krugman, who notes that “some people I respect believe that trying to get …[the growth rate] back up should be a big goal of policy.” But Dr. Krugman […]

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