No Progress on Global Emissions 8 Years After Paris Climate Agreement
Officials admitted at COP28 that they are not "on track" to achieving climate goals. And they are not likely to be any time soon.
Officials admitted at COP28 that they are not "on track" to achieving climate goals. And they are not likely to be any time soon.
But perhaps the beginning of the end of era of fossil fuels?
The world will not come to its end in 2030 because of climate change.
Countries could include reducing the consumption and production of fossil fuels.
The activist demand that the U.S. phase out all fossil fuels in eight years is borderline insane.
It seems unlikely that activists' demands to "keep 1.5 alive" will be met.
Previewing the "global stocktake" of climate progress, demands for climate reparations, and the call for a worldwide fossil fuel phase-out.
China pledges again to do exactly what it was going to do anyway.
It's virtually certain that 2023 will be the warmest year ever in the instrumental temperature record.
Studies are mixed on whether or not it will make a difference.
The Department of Energy has announced a good way to spend some of the funds authorized by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
The bigger problem now is that outmoded regulations stand in the way of deployment.
At COP27, poor countries demand climate change "loss and damage" funding from rich countries.
Many politicians who want to ban gas-powered vehicles appear to misunderstand the science.
If the Golden State wants to convert to electrical vehicles, it better start embracing nuclear power.
The pact will phase down the use of HFC coolants.
But only if politicians 30 years from now keep promises made by politicians today.
Global temperature to rise to around 2.2°C above the pre-industrial average by 2100.
Teutonic carbon dioxide emissions and electricity prices are projected to increase as a result.
Accelerating market and technological trends will fortuitously keep many COP26 promises.
The policies and technologies they reject as "false solutions" would actually work to mitigate climate change.
Planting trees as a partial solution to climate change has broad bipartisan appeal.
Meanwhile, the U.S.-China Joint Glasgow Declaration is "a stage-managed nothingburger."
Top-down mandates will only slow down the energy transition.
China and Russia aren’t interested in bigger emissions cuts.
The plan would require a substantial retirement of machines that run on fossil fuels.
Parsing technology trends, policy proposals, and clean tax cuts
A doubling of carbon dioxide all but guarantees warming of more than 2 degrees Celsius, says a new study.
A real plan or just a "climate messaging exercise"?
Emissions reductions in rich countries are being offset by increases in developing countries.
"Stop using the worst-case scenario for climate warming as the most likely outcome"
The Breakthrough Institute's Ted Nordhaus urges Americans to reject both doomism and denialism.
Hope, despair, diplomatic equivocation
The "New World Energy Outlook" report by the International Energy Agency suggests global warming is here to stay.
Or, will global leaders ignore them just like they did the People's Climate March in 2014?
It also protects and restores imperiled biodiversity.
"We're working hard, maybe harder than all previous administrations, maybe almost all of them."
No, our kids will not be doomed in 12 years if we don't adopt her Green New Deal.
Using climate change as an excuse to pursue other social and economic goals.
Raising the price of gasoline, heat, and electricity is a steep political hill to climb.
Very little carbon reduction, lots of political patronage.
Meanwhile U.S. carbon dioxide emissions continue to fall
Carbon-neutral transportation fuels might be possible.
Skip renewables for zero-carbon electricity and go directly to nuclear
Paris Agreement Climate Change
Despite the E.U.'s carbon markets and vast renewable energy subsidies
Funny: These cities didn't disclose any concerns about climate change in their bond issues.