FreshRSS

πŸ”’
☐ β˜† βœ‡ Dissent MagazineDissent Magazine

Markets Won’t Stop Fossil Fuels

By: Geoff Mann β€” June 29th 2023 at 12:39

Global climate institutions have embraced the primacy of capital, private firms, and marketsβ€”and in so doing have fatally undermined their own efficacy.

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Salon.com

United States includes dam emissions in UN climate reporting for the first time

By: Tara Lohan β€” March 25th 2023 at 11:29
Better accounting can go a long way in establishing sound policy to tackle the climate crisis

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Salon.com

The IPCC says we need to phase down fossil fuels, fast. Here’s how the US could do it

By: Joseph Winters β€” March 24th 2023 at 18:54
A new report lists 10 policies to constrain polluting infrastructure and achieve key climate goals

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Salon.com

Why North Dakota is preparing to sue Minnesota over clean energy

By: Zoya Teirstein β€” March 4th 2023 at 12:29
Interstate feuds threaten to make getting regional power grids off fossil fuels even more complicated

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Salon.com

How the "electrify everything" movement went mainstream

By: Emily Pontecorvo β€” February 19th 2023 at 13:29
One in five Americans now lives in an area that's trying to move buildings off fossil fuels

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Salon.com

Documents show how a pipeline company paid Minnesota millions to police protests

By: Alleen Brown Β·Β John McCracken β€” February 19th 2023 at 02:00
From riot gear to PR to Dairy Queen, records detail every expense Enbridge reimbursed after the Line 3 protests.

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Salon.com

Why are BP, Shell, and Exxon suddenly backing off their climate promises?

By: Kate Yoder β€” February 17th 2023 at 12:45
"If we see value, we’ll do it. If we don’t, we won’t."

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Salon.com

Not to be outdone, the EU commits $270 billion to its own Green New Deal

By: Brett Marsh β€” February 5th 2023 at 21:29
No one wants to be left behind in the growing green economy

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Ars Technica

New wind, solar are cheaper than costs to operate all but one US coal plant

By: Inside Climate News β€” January 31st 2023 at 14:29
Coal plant

Enlarge / A train carrying cars loaded with coal leaving a nearby coal mine is seen in front of Dry Fork Station, a coal-fired power plant operated by Basin Electric Power Cooperative, on Monday May 8, 2017, in Gillette, Wyoming. (credit: Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

A coal-fired plant near Gillette, Wyoming, stands alone in the nation on one measure of economic viabilityβ€”a positive distinction for that plant, but a damning one for coal-fired electricity in general.

Dry Fork Station, with generating capacity of 405 megawatts, is the only coal plant in the country that costs less to operate than it would take to replace the plant’s output by building new wind or solar plants in the same communities or regions, according to a new report issued today by the think tank Energy Innovation.

The report joins prior editions in 2019 and 2021 that, when viewed together, show how the economics of coal power are deteriorating. In 2019, the authors found that more than 70 percent of coal plants were more expensive to operate compared to the alternative of building new wind or solar. That share has now grown to 99 percent, with only the plant in Wyoming stopping it from being 100 percent.

Read 27 remaining paragraphs | Comments

☐ β˜† βœ‡ Salon.com

Thousands of protestors fought the expansion of a German coal mine β€” in vain

By: Maria Parazo Rose β€” January 22nd 2023 at 19:59
Police dispersed hundreds of protestors rallying to save a tiny village from demolition

❌