The U.S. has debated for decades the issue of offshore drilling, with the backlash largely sparked in 1969 by a major spill off the coast of Santa Barbara. Journalist and science writer Eric Roston and Kenneth Medlock, fellow at the Baker Institute, provide insight.
On the program: – UN chief Ban Ki-moon sets up a high-level advisory panel to jump start financing for developing nations to battle climate change. – President Obama releases his Economic Report… Inside: a plan for a clean energy future. – State energy regulators will soon tell the feds what they want from Washington. The [...]
President Calderon talks about the next COP16 in Mexico 2010
Clean Skies Sunday reports on the new reality for Senate Democrats. With only 59 Democratic votes, Tyler Suiters breaks down the future of energy legislation, a bill regulating the controversial act of hydro-fracking, and a push to nullify the EPA endangerment finding on greenhouse gases. Energy analyst Kevin Book discusses the possible merger between Exxon-Mobil and XTO. It’s been one month since the end of the Copenhagen talks, and Ned Helme, President of the Center for Clean Air Policy discusses what’s been done since then.And it’s an electrifying ride at the North American International Auto Show – we’ll show you the newest, greenest cars about to hit the road.
President Barack Obama spoke on the last day of climate talks at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark. The President called on all major economies to put forward decisive national actions that will reduce their emissions and turn the corner on climate change.
Margaret Ryan reports on White House Climate Change Advisor, Carol Browner, who assessed the Obama Administration’s progress on clean energy. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar will hold a meeting tomorrow on the Cape Wind project. The Sierra Club and others are suing Massey Energy claiming it has violated 12,000 pollution laws. And Lee Patrick Sullivan is at the Detroit Auto Show where the vehicles are the greenest ever.
Report from Denmark on the final week of the Copenhagen climate change talks. In the end, negotiators came to an agreement, but that resolution is getting mixed reactions.
Secretary of State Clinton tries to break the impasse at the Copenhagen climate summit by offering $100 billion a year for a decade to developing nations. Jeffrey Ball reports on how the offer was received in Copenhagen.
On the final day of negotiations in Copenhagen, President Obama urged the 193 countries to compromise on key demands in order to seal an accord to combat climate change. Also , an environmental group backed by the Chinese government has won two lawsuits on behalf of residents threatened by pollution. Chinese courts have historically barred groups like the All China Environment Federation from bringing such suits as plaintiffs. OPEC will probably maintain its output quotas at next week’s meeting as prices trade close to members’ target of $75 a barrel. And one of the keys to living under a global emissions treaty may be shale gas. Susan McGinnis takes an in depth look at one of the game changing plays in the U.S., the Marcellus.
Week 2 of UN World Climate talks have started in Copenhagen, leaving five days left for world negotiators to try to strike a substantive deal on climate change. Clean Skies News is there with team coverage and comments from UK Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband, Executive Director of International Energy Agency (IEA) Nobuo Tanaka, South Africa Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Chesapeake Energy CEO, Aubrey McClendon.
Some 15,000 delegates from 192 nations gather in Copenhagen for two weeks of negotiations on an agreement that would succeed the Kyoto Protocol and set new global carbon emission targets. At the heart of the deal must be a settlement between the wealthy countries and the developing world. Video courtesy of Reuters.
In this tour, Stephen Schneider introduces us to the factors that affect future climate change, how scientists make projections, and what we can do to prevent the worst impacts. Learn more at www.google.com/cop15
Learn about climate change in this Google Earth introductory tour narrated by Al Gore, the first in a series of Google Earth tours leading up to the UN Climate Summit in Copenhagen in December. For more climate change tours, visit http://www.google.com/cop15
Learn about the impacts of our changing climate, and how groups are working to cope with them. Find out more at www.google.com/cop15
Days before heading to the global climate conference in Copenhagen, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger unveiled a new report predicting that almost half a million Californians could be at risk from rising sea levels along the coast.
President Barack Obama and China’s President Hu Jintao came together at the U.N. to talk climate change. But as the WSJ’s Steve Power reports, the meetings were noticeable as much for what wasn’t said as what was.
As Democrats work to push a climate change bill through the Senate, all eyes are on this controversial approach to combating global warming.
President Obama starts another day at the G-8 summit in Italy. The group has already endorsed a new agreement to battle climate change, but as Fox’s Doug Luzader reports, there’s already a big rift in the making
U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, known as an outspoken critic of China’s human rights policy, turns her focus to climate change in Beijing at a meeting with China’s Premier Wen Jiabao and President Hu Jintao. Video courtesy of Reuters.
Chevron CEO, Dave O’Reilly and Sierra Club Executive Director, Carl Pope debate America’s Energy Future. (Part three of three)
Chevron CEO, Dave O’Reilly and Sierra Club Executive Director, Carl Pope debate America’s Energy Future. (Part two of three)
Chevron CEO, Dave O’Reilly and Sierra Club Executive Director, Carl Pope debate America’s Energy Future. (Part one of three)
Democratic leaders are gearing up to push climate-change legislation to a House vote later this summer. But the deal-making required to pass the act means the bill’s real-world impact on the environment and energy use could be slower and less substantial than the president once proposed, WSJ’s Steve Power explains
On the eve of the inauguration, attendees of the Green Inaugural Ball and the Arkansas Inaugural Gala in Washington, D.C. — including former President Bill Clinton — share their hopes for Barack Obama’s first 100 days in office.
At the ECO:nomics summit, former Vice President Al Gore discusses his 10-year plan to end utilities’ use of carbon-based fuels.
Google CEO Eric Schmidt talks about Silicon Valley’s search for smart ways to rein in fossil-fuel use at the ECO:nomics conference.
WSJ’s Kelsey Hubbard interviews Craig Noble, portfolio manager at Brookfield Redding, about the stimulus plan and its role in infrastructure and carbon markets.
General Electic CEO Jeffrey Immelt talks with WSJ’s Alan Murray about cap-and-trade on carbon emissions and how the U.S. already has a greenhouse gas policy — but nobody knows about it.
During an interview conducted by The Wall Street Journal’s Alan Murray at the ECO:nomics Conference, former Vice President Al Gore was challenged on his stance on carbon emissions by Bjorn Lomborg of Copenhagen Business School.
Van Jones from the White House Council of Environmental Quality visits a local work site that gives us a glimpse of the clean energy economy that’s on the way. Green roofing is just one of the countless green job opportunities that will emerge from President Obama’s comprehensive energy policy.
The makings of a change in the culture of Washington can be seen as the President announces a breakthrough on fuel economy and greenhouse gas emissions. He is joined by the Presidents, CEOs, or other top executives from Ford, Toyota, General Motors, Honda, Chrysler, BMW AG, Nissan, Mercedez-Benz, Mazda, Volkswagon, and the United Auto Workers.
Rising to the Challenge of Copenhagen The clock is now ticking for the international community to deliver the successor to the Kyoto Protocol in time for the UN Copenhagen Meeting
Public policy think tank Civic Exchange and the British Consulate-General co-organised a workshop to explore the latest developments in carbon trading and the implications for the financial centres of the world. This workshop is supported by Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited.
Congress fails to pass the landmark bill that would have regulated carbon emissions. Can Americans and the next president reverse course?
Europe’s way ahead and getting gov’t support. But T. Boone Pickens is betting on wind and Washington’s support. And nuclear’s getting a fresh look.
While gov’t must lean on business to tackle climate change, recall what happened with Clinton-Detroit’s new car project, and corn-based ethanol.
Oil profits soared in ’08, but none of the companies are investing in alternatives in a meaningful way. It’s all going toward finding more oil/natural gas.
For years, those who pushed for fuel-efficient/zero-emission vehicles have found themselves on a collision course with Detroit and Washington.
We get 52 percent of our electricity from coal-fired plants. They emit 2 billion tons of CO2 a year. Can clean coal technology be developed — and in time?
With the IPCC issuing ever more urgent reports on climate change, there’s a growing momentum in the U.S and the world for real change.
America’s growth, consumption has produced record CO2 levels; India, China are right behind with oil, coal, natural gas demand. Is the planet doomed?
Disappearing glaciers, rising sea levels, expanding deserts — the world is changing faster, more dramatically than ever was anticipated.
United Nations, New York, 14 May 2009: The United Nations is leading a powerful new campaign to encourage governments to seal the deal on a fair, balanced and effective agreement on climate change
The U.S. has debated for decades the issue of offshore drilling, with the backlash largely sparked in 1969 by a major spill off the coast of Santa Barbara. Journalist and science writer Eric Roston and Kenneth Medlock, fellow at the Baker Institute, provide insight.