The Paris Agreement Lays a Good Foundation for Climate Progress
The Paris Agreement lays a good foundation for climate progress in the future.
The Paris Agreement lays a good foundation for climate progress in the future.
Cities and states struggling with mitigation of urban heat islands.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s most recent set of reports, generally referred to collectively as the Fifth Assessment Report, present significant data and findings about climate change. But what role does law play in addressing and responding to these findings?
The “Paris Gap” in greenhouse gas emissions can be filled in part through private initiatives.
Turkey's ill-considered rush to coal undercuts climate change emissions progress.
Are the Pope's critiques of markets on point or, unfortunately, somewhat misguided?
Environmentalists are battling against the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement.
The dangers of climate change are not usually couched in terms of national security, but awareness of the issue is growing rapidly. What could be more basic to security than a climate conducive for agriculture, abundant water supplies, ecosystem health, industrial production, biodiversity, and human comfort? What could be more threatening than extreme weather events or mass migrations because of rising seas and crop failures? The annual ELI-Miriam Hamilton Keare Policy Forum brought together top experts on the topic.
It’s not the material injected underground to release shale gas — it’s the dangerous fluid and gases that come back to the surface. The lost opportunity to perform a thorough evaluation of the potential adverse health consequences of fracking has hurt the industry.
In a few weeks, the 21st Conference of the Parties of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change will convene in Paris to hammer out for the first time an accord that will have binding targets for almost all nations, industrialized and developing alike. We polled some of the leading thinkers and activists involved in the climate change negotiations, asking them what the United States needs to do to realize an agreement that we can live with — one that protects the environment and also wins favor in the Senate and among the American public.