Broke down the future of energy with
@CarbonWrangler, @mclott, and @DavidAFreed on Yang Speaks today.
Hint: It’s going to be terrible... unless we get our act together.
Check it out!
https://t.co/agaWS5m7Xd
In a Thursday testimony before the House Subcommittee on Environment & Climate Change, Duke's Tim Profeta shared his proposal for overcoming the national political stalemate on the issue of climate change
https://t.co/oRiqy9Kt8p
I wish @BillGates would put $4 billion into lobbying both parties to make climate change our top national priority in 2020 election cycle. That might do more for humanity than any other person or act.
China is on a coal-plant building spree again. Back in 2017, the central government stopped or suspended plans for some 169.5 GW of new coal power plants. But a new report finds that about half those plants are now moving forward: https://t.co/n7y4YPDddh
The shallowest Great Lake provides drinking water for more people than any other. Algae blooms are making it toxic — and it’s getting worse. https://t.co/T3SXAh7lE3
"TROSA Day!" @CityofDurhamNC recognized TROSA's 25 years in service to men and women working to rebuild their lives. Thank you for this Proclamation, which made our Graduation Ceremony extra special! Read more: https://t.co/pJCdZIuK5X
This is awesome: @Shopify commits to buy $1M of negative emissions / year as part of a larger climate strategy: https://t.co/NTYJq7RyV7
Thanks @tobi for the leadership
Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren are right that the climate crisis demands a radical break from discredited ideologies -- but that includes the left's anti-nuclear absolutism. https://t.co/s0mDfYOB1t
I just want to say thank you to @sunrisemvmt for pushing so hard to put #climatechange at top of the agenda! You played pivotal role in getting the #ClimateTownHall, the most substantive, focused discussion of climate policy in US political history (& asking many key ?s at it) 👏
The big picture via @axios: In 1987, 81% of our world’s energy consumption came from oil, natural gas and coal. Thirty years later, it is still 81% — despite the incredible increase in wind and solar energy, according to the @IEA. https://t.co/eYdoCBcPwc