Inside Climate News: U.S. Bans on Certain Foreign Fish Imports Could Help Conserve Marine Mammals Worldwide, Experts Say
It’s widely agreed that the United States has the most aggressive and successful regulations in place to conserve marine mammals….
Inside Climate News: Will NASA Kill a Pair of Critical Climate Satellites?
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 and -3, (or OCO-2 and -3) have been circling the globe for years, gathering some of the best data available on carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere.
Earthjustice: Court Reaffirms Protections for Pacific Islands Heritage Marine National Monument
A federal court in Honolulu delivered a major win for the Pacific Islands Heritage Marine National Monument. It ruled that the Trump administration’s attempt to open over 400,000 square miles of protected waters to commercial fishing is unlawful.
Earth Day: Busting Myths About Wind Energy
While wind energy has been disparaged as “woke”, nearly 70% of America’s wind power is cranked out in states proudly flying the Republican flag. These red states are quietly leading the charge on wind energy, proving clean power isn’t just a blue state fad.
New York Times: White House Orders Agencies to Escalate Fight Against Offshore Wind
The effort involves several agencies that typically have little to do with wind power, including the Health and Human Services Department. The White House has taken the extraordinary step of instructing a half-dozen agencies to draft plans to thwart the country’s offshore wind industry…
Guardian: Collapse of critical Atlantic current is no longer low-likelihood, study finds
The collapse of a critical Atlantic current can no longer be considered a low-likelihood event, a study has concluded, making deep cuts to fossil fuel emissions even more urgent to avoid the catastrophic impact.
Bloomberg Green Daily: Bridges Damaged By Increasing Heat Extremes
Bridge materials expand and contract in response to temperature fluctuations. While most are equipped with features to accommodate that movement, they were designed to withstand historically cooler temperatures, says Paul Chinowsky, professor of civil engineering at the U of Colorado Boulder.
Surfrider: Hawai‘i Supreme Court Victory – Pesticides Used Near Ocean in Kaua’i
The Surfrider Foundation and our partners are celebrating a significant victory at the Hawai‘i Supreme Court, after challenging a state decision exempting a seed research company utilizing restricted use pesticides from complying with Hawai‘i’s environmental law.
Oikonos News: We’re Taking On Alcatraz
Together with their amazing partners: California College of the Arts, Golden Gate National Recreation Area, Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, and ceramic artist Nathan Lynch, OIKONOS has brought their ceramic nest project to a new site: Alcatraz.
Pacific Forest Trust: California’s Game-Changing Climate Solution – Nature Based Climate Credits
Even as California in facing increasing impacts of climate change on the ground, it is also in an intense policy discussion to reauthorize its pioneering climate policy and the Cap and Invest program.
Canary Media: Peak Energy’s new battery is cooler than lithium-ion systems
Rather than trying to catch up with China by replicating the battery technologies already in mass production there, a smaller U.S. cohort is taking a different tack: building factories for next-generation batteries.
Inside Climate News: Melting on the Arctic’s Svalbard Islands Shows the Climate Future Is Now
The rapid disintegration of glaciers on the islands north of Norway foreshadows a catastrophic future for the Arctic, scientists warn.
Oikonos News: Drones in the sky, seabirds in sight!
This year, the Brandt’s Cormorant population at Año Nuevo Island has soared beyond historical records with over 15,000 nesting birds. To count them, we collaborate with the UC Natural Reserve team, who fly drones high above to photograph the entire island.
Center For Biological Diversity
We’re celebrating a surprising milestone in the fight for Oak Flat, public lands in Arizona sacred to Indigenous peoples and habitat for species like endangered ocelots and Arizona hedgehog cacti.
How Fresh Fish From Monterey Bay Reaches School Lunch Trays
Back in 2014, it seemed absurd to Jenn Lovewell, director of Monterey Peninsula USD that the 10,000 students of the school district didn’t have access to the fish from the bay (versus no-local frozen fish sticks). She set out to change that.
Watsonville Wetlands Watch
With the beginning of the school year, we have three new cohorts of Wetland Stewards interns from Pajaro Valley High School taking action on behalf of our local wetlands, watersheds, and environment.
Sierra Club: Big Win for Gray Wolves in the Northern Rockies
In a huge win for Northern Rockies wolves, a federal judge in Montana ruled that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service broke the law last year when it denied a petition to protect these large carnivores in the Northern Rocky Mountains under the Endangered Species Act.
Earthjustice: Court Stops Trump Attack on Pacific Islands Heritage Marine National Monument
In a major win for the Pacific Islands Heritage National Monument a federal court ruled that the Trump administration’s attempt to open over 400,000 square miles of protected waters to commercial fishing is unlawful. The court’s ruling was decisive, confirming that commercial fishing remains banned in the monument.
CNBC: Ford Announces $2 Billion Investment in Affordable EVs
Aug 11 – Ford announced it would invest $2 billion in a Louisville, Kentucky, assembly plant aimed at rolling out more affordable electric vehicles.
Earthjustice: Lawsuit Forces USDA To Reinstate Sustainable Agriculture Grants
Aug 14 – A federal court ruled in our favor and ordered the Trump administration to restore six USDA grants to sustainable agriculture organizations.