• For Immediate Release: Groups Echo Urgency for Gulf Restoration

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contacts: Elizabeth Skree, Environmental Defense Fund, 202.553.2543,  eskree@edf.org Lacey McCormick, National Wildlife Federation, 512.610.7765, mccormick@nwf.org Erin Greeson, National Audubon Society, 503.913.8978, egreeson@audubon.org Andrew Blejwas, The Nature…

  • Climate change and Colorado – stakes are high, solutions are at hand

    July 29, 2014

  • U.S. Energy Department’s Natural Gas Initiatives a Solid Step, But Regulations Still Needed to Control Methane Emissions

    July 29, 2014

  • To Unlock Wind, Build Transmission Lines Linking the Plains to the Cities

    Guest Author: Robert Fares, Mechanical Engineering Ph.D. student at the University Texas at Austin This commentary originally appeared on Scientific America's Plugged In blog.  A vital factor affecting the economics of any energy source is transportation: where is the fuel extracted, where…

  • Statement of Fred Krupp, President of Environmental Defense Fund

    July 29, 2014

  • Latest Mississippi River Delta News: July 29, 2014

    Restoration Council approves RESTORE process for oil spill funds By Valerie Garman, The News Herald (Panama City, Fla.). July 28, 2014. “A group tasked with paving the way for allocating billions of dollars…” ( read more ) Impact of Deepwater Horizon oil spill on coral is deeper and broader…

  • Four Lessons in Corporate Water Efficiency

    By Guest Author by Susannah Harris, 2014 Climate Corps Fellow I received quizzical looks from family and friends when I told them I was working on water efficiency projects at Verizon this summer. They paused, racking their brains about where water is used within the telecommunications…

  • EDF president Fred Krupp says Clean Power Plan is moderate, flexible and necessary

    July 29, 2014

  • How Big Data Can Fight Climate Change in Los Angeles

    By Jorge Madrid Map from the LASER Atlas showing temperature rise projections in Los Angeles You may be wondering – as I was before we started a project with the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation over a year ago – “what the heck does Big Data have to do with climate change?” To start,…

  • NARUC Summer Meeting Highlights Clean Power Plan, Changing Utilities

    By Diane Munns The Official CTBTO Flickr The annual summer meeting of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) is a meeting of the minds like no other. Utility companies, regulators, staff, advocates, and trade press from around the country gather to discuss emerging…

  • How Big Data Can Fight Climate Change in Los Angeles

    By Jorge Madrid You may be wondering – as I was before we started a project with the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation over a year ago – “what the heck does Big Data have to do with climate change?” To start, here’s a piece from Climate Central that exemplifies the new power of big data. …

  • National Academy of Sciences strongly affirms science showing styrene is a human carcinogen

    By Richard Denison Richard Denison, Ph.D. , is a Lead Senior Scientist.  It’s been a ridiculously long road to get here, because of the delay tactics of the chemical industry.  But yesterday a panel of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) fully backed the National Toxicology Program’s (NTP)…

  • White House Says New Clean Energy Maps Answer Call to Unleash Data, Build Climate Resiliency

    July 29, 2014

  • Historic California-Mexico agreement boosts international climate collaboration

    July 28, 2014

  • Using Google Street View in our Fight Against Climate Change

    By Steven Hamburg Throughout history, maps have played a critical role in shaping our decisions—helping us determine where we are going and how we are going to get there. Now, we’re using them to define a way to address climate change. Environmental Defense Fund and Google Earth Outreach have…

  • Keeping Your Cool on a Heat Island

      By Jessica D’Itri It’s 9 a.m. and I’m on my way to my internship at EPA. I’m sweating through my clothes, my hair is plastered to my neck, and mascara is pooling under my eyes. The summertime heat and D.C.’s swampy humidity are bad enough, but an extra dose of suffering comes from the…

  • Taking Action During California’s Drought

    By André Villaseñor Did you know up to 60 percent of your body is made of water? Recently, I thought about water quite a bit while my daughters and I were camping in Joshua Tree National Park. To survive three days in the desert, we brought 15 gallons of water. We were able to thrive […]

  • Pollinator Week Had My Mind Abuzz

    By Isabella Bennett Last month’s pollinator protection week (June 16-22) got my mind buzzing, thinking about popular attitudes toward bees and other pollinators. Sadly, too many people fear, rather than appreciate, our busy little friends. Let me give you an example. One spring afternoon, my…

  • (WASTED) FOOD FIGHT!

    By Amanda Hong Consider this shocking fact – a whopping 40% of food produced in the U.S. goes to waste. Though we preach waste reduction in my household, we contribute to that percentage of waste. My partner purchased a box of mangoes last week. We love mangoes, but were only able to enjoy a few…

  • Switch Flipped On at Largest Solar Farm on a Superfund Site

    By Charlie Howland I work on an EPA initiative called RE-Powering America’s Land, which encourages renewable energy development on contaminated lands, landfills, and mine sites.  I was excited to learn that the switch was recently flipped at the 10 megawatt Maywood Solar Farm on 45 acres in…