The International Energy Agency chose the second day of the Warsaw Climate Change Conference this past November to put out its much-anticipated
When people ask my thoughts on nuclear power, I usually reply that it is the lesser of other energy evils. I’d prefer
Twenty years ago, I and a small group of undergrads from various American universities flew into Lagos on a muggy January evening.
Millions of barrels of oil and trillions of cubic feet of natural gas lay undeveloped in Canada’s Mackenzie Valley, a fact that
Judging from the flood of press releases in recent months announcing cap and trade schemes for carbon emissions, we may have reached
Bob Inglis is going to be late. The former Republican representative from South Carolina is driving his car while doing a phone
Hampshire College has a long history of putting its money behind its progressive principles, serving in the vanguard of various divestment movements.
North America couldn’t survive without the Great Lakes. They power the economy, quench inhabitants’ thirst and provide an array of ecosystem services.
It’s been two years since I left my post at Corporate Knights to pursue a career in environmental education. Today, as program
On this we can agree: The relationship between people and the natural world is broken. We fail to value the systems that