Climate Change People will never vote for a carbon tax, so let’s stop asking Voters in the state of Washington rejected, once again, what would have been the US’s first carbon tax. by James Temple 2018-11-07T14:57:00-05:00
Climate Change How the science of persuasion could change the politics of climate change Conservatives have to make the case to conservatives, and a growing number of them are. by James Temple 2018-04-16T00:00:00-04:00
Sustainable Energy Surge of Carbon Pricing Proposals Coming in the New Year The state measures could save hundreds of millions of tons in carbon emissions over the next decade. by James Temple 2017-12-04T00:00:00-05:00
Sustainable Energy California Proposes Ambitious New Cap-and-Trade Program The legislation would set one of the highest prices for carbon in the world. by James Temple 2017-05-01T15:04:00-04:00
Sustainable Energy Canada’s Carbon Tax Needs to Spread South of the Border The U.S.’s northern neighbor has announced a bold step toward reducing its carbon emissions. Can America follow suit? by Jamie Condliffe 2016-10-04T11:05:00-04:00
Sustainable Energy Is the Carbon Tax Dead? The idea has been around for decades. Economists love it. But only 15 governments worldwide have it. by Peter Fairley 2015-07-01T15:01:00-04:00
View DOE to Push Development of Huge Potential Source of Greenhouse Gas Emissions The Department of Energy and the Alaskan Government are speeding up development of oil sands and methane hydrates. by Kevin Bullis 2013-04-19T14:37:53-04:00
Business Impact Death Knell for Some Clean Tech Companies With prospects dim for comprehensive climate legislation, companies focused on carbon emissions could fail or be forced to scale back their ambitions. by Kevin Bullis 2010-08-18T00:00:00-04:00
Sustainable Energy "Get Coal Out of the System" Combating climate change requires dealing with coal emissions–and misinformation, an MIT figure says. by David Talbot 2008-11-17T00:00:00-05:00
Sustainable Energy Why Carbon Credits Don't Work Sometimes carbon credits fund clean industries that would prosper anyway. by Kevin Bullis 2008-04-22T00:00:00-04:00