Budget Games Threaten Clean Energy and Efficiency Gains

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Hot on the heels of a State of the Union address that claimed to “end the war on American energy” but ignored the booming clean energy industry, a leaked budget proposal from the Trump administration suggests that federal funding for renewable energy and efficiency programs should be slashed […]

The Military Takes Climate Change Seriously. Why Won’t the Commander-in-Chief?

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund President Trump with Defense Secretary Jim Mattis walking into the Pentagon Carolyn Kaster/AP As we all know by now, the Trump administration is rife with climate deniers. Defense Secretary James Mattis, however, isn’t one of them. Like many within the defense community—including most of our military leaders—Mattis not […]

A Few Things About Wetlands that Might Surprise You

Published by Ocean Conservancy Just in time for World Wetlands Day 2018, we’ve got some of the coolest, wildest facts about these incredibly fertile and diversity-rich ecosystems. From the marshes of the Gulf to the Great Dismal Swamp, some of our most fascinating natural wonders may lie in some of the most unexpected places. While celebrating […]

DOI: Public Lands Are for Private Exploitation, Others Keep Out

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke made sweeping changes this week to the way oil and gas are leased on public lands. The bottom line: Joe and Jane Citizen—0; Dirty Energy Industry—100. Even by the low standards of the Trump Administration, the new policies are a shocking negation of public process and environmental […]

Six Cool Alaska Science Stories

Published by Ocean Conservancy Every January, hundreds of scientists gather for the Alaska Marine Science Symposium in Anchorage. For three days, I had the pleasure of diving into the latest marine science from some of the best minds working in the region. Each day brought new and exciting insights from three key marine areas: the Gulf […]

No, Trump Has Not Ended the War on American Energy

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund His attack on our clean energy future is just getting started. Reuters Anyone who listened to President Trump’s first State of the Union address Tuesday night might be forgiven for not recognizing the country he described. A nation so fearful of its neighbors it must build a “great wall” between them? A […]

New York Should Demand More Efficiency from National Grid

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund One of New York’s largest electric utilities, National Grid, is proposing a lackluster energy efficiency program for 2018-2020 that is inconsistent with New York’s clean energy and climate change goals. Fortunately, Governor Cuomo has created a perfect opportunity to secure a better program not only for National Grid, […]

Secretary Zinke Signs Declaration Recognizing Marian Anderson Mural in First-Ever Designation of a Site Under the African American Civil Rights Network Act

Published by the Department of the Interior Secretary Zinke today celebrated the life and legacy of famed ​opera singer Marian Anderson by designating a mural depicting her 1939 Lincoln Memorial concert as a historic site under the African American Civil Rights​ Network Act of 201​7. Read the full article at: https://www.doi.gov/pressreleases/secretary-zinke-signs-declaration-recognizing-marian-anderson-mural-first-ever

With EPA Concessions, NRDC Drops Landfill Emissions Lawsuit

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund The Environmental Protection Agency last week made significant concessions in a lawsuit by NRDC and our partners challenging EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt’s illegal suspension of rules curbing harmful emissions from landfills. EPA has conceded that its May 2017 stay of the landfill emissions standards had no practical effects and […]

Debunking the State of the Union on Infrastructure

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund How about this for a disastrous trifecta? President Trump was wrong on the facts, misguided in his emphasis and avoided the real issue when he discussed infrastructure last night. In his State of the Union address, Trump took aim at the environmental reviews required before a federal road […]

Gulf Restoration: Moving Planning Across State Lines

Published by Ocean Conservancy Restoring the Gulf of Mexico after the BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster will take a lot of time and money, and there are several different decision-makers involved. One of those decision-making bodies is the Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Council, a group of state and federal agency leaders who oversee $3.2 billion in […]

Tax law is boosting chemical industry investment in the U.S.

Wow, that was fast. Congress’s historic tax reform bill, the ‘Tax Cuts and Jobs Act’ (H.R. 1) took effect earlier this month, and companies are already announcing plans for new U.S. investments made possible in part by the new law. On Monday, ExxonMobil shared the news that the company plans to invest $50 billion over […]

Environment Ignored in State of the Union Address

Published by the Environmental News Service WASHINGTON, DC, January 31, 2018 (ENS) – To hear President Donald Trump deliver his first State of the Union Address to both houses of Congress last night was to realize that for him the environment does not exist. Or, he would like the American public to ignore what his […]

Confronting Plastic in the Ocean: California’s Stalled Push to ‘Keep the Cap On’

Published by Ocean Conservancy By now you might have heard about a California bill that would push restaurants to offer plastic straws to diners only upon request. While the anti-straw movement has gained considerable momentum in the past few years, these ubiquitous utensils haven’t been the only item under legislative consideration on the West coast. Last […]

5 interesting facts about the Pantanal, the world’s largest tropical wetland

Published by the World Wildlife Fund Wetlands—places where the land is covered by water, either salt, fresh, or somewhere in between—cover just over 6% of the Earth’s land surface. Sprinkled throughout every continent except Antarctica, they provide food, clean drinking water, and refuge for countless people and animals around the world. Despite their global significance, an […]

5 interesting facts about the Pantanal, the world’s largest wetland

Published by the World Wildlife Fund Wetlands—places where the land is covered by water, either salt, fresh, or somewhere in between—cover just over 6% of the Earth’s land surface. Sprinkled throughout every continent except Antarctica, they provide food, clean drinking water, and refuge for countless people and animals around the world. Despite their global significance, an […]

Rare Earth Elements Discovered in American Coal

Published by the Environmental News Service WASHINGTON, DC, January 29, 2018 (ENS) – The U.S. Department of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory has found high concentrations of rare earth elements in coal samples taken from five American coal basins.  Currently, China controls about 98 percent of the world market for these critical minerals. Read the full […]

Mainstreaming Green Buildings: Telangana’s New Online System

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Buildings codes saves lives. Not only do they keep buildings from falling down or burning up, but they save far more lives by reducing energy use, which in turn reduces the need to burn polluting fuels like coal to make electricity. Air pollution is responsible for 4.5 million […]

Petitioning Canada to Save Iconic Whales

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Beam Reach Today NRDC, together with our Canadian partners, petitioned the Trudeau government for emergency action in the case of southern resident killer whales. Few wildlife species are as iconic as the resident killer whales that inhabit the Salish Sea, off Washington State and British Columbia. They are […]

Can the Great Lakes Become Fishable, Drinkable, and Swimmable Again?

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund Upper Peninsula Michigan, Lake Superior iStock As Mark Mattson waited to speak to Canada’s minister for the environment, Catherine McKenna, about the Great Lakes last December, he could feel the weight of the 184-page report he carried in his shoulder bag. At the Toronto meeting, McKenna asked Mattson, […]

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