Trump promoted fossil fuels. His war is pushing the world away from them.
As oil prices spike, governments are slashing fuel use and eyeing renewables — threatening to erode global demand for fossil energy.
Could the rest of the world fund climate change solutions without the United States?
Gov. Hochul’s reliance on fossil fuels may end up costing more than renewables, clean energy advocates say.
Governor Kathy Hochulâs proposal to weaken the stateâs emissions targets reflects a fundamental tension in the process of decarbonization.
Price spikes from the war highlight the necessity of the renewable energy transition for stability and national security, the U.N. official says.
The Pentagon’s new $200 billion private equity fund would harm the critical industries it aims to support.
The decline of domestic fossil fuel production in the United States poses serious economic risks for communities that rely on fossil fuel industries for jobs and public revenues. Many of these communities lack the resources and capacity to manage those risks on their own. The absence of viable economic strategies for affected regions is a barrier to building the broad, durable coalitions needed for an equitable national transition to cleaner energy sources.
Models can predict catastrophic or modest damages from climate change, but not which of these futures is coming.