Many states whose projects to combat climate change have been approved say they’re urging the feds to issue their funding before the election.
Former President Donald Trump has said he would cancel all unspent funds from President Joe Biden's signature climate law if he wins the presidential election on Nov. 5.
Climate change came across as an afterthought in the presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump last week. At 92 minutes into the debate, ABC News anchor Linsey Davis asked the sole question addressing it directly, with answers from Harris and Trump lasting less than three minutes.
As President Biden’s signature climate law spurs energy investments in Republican-led districts, many Republican members are getting on board with keeping at least some of its tax credits — including the Speaker of the House.
House Speaker Mike Johnson said President Joe Biden’s signature climate law would be an early target for Republicans if Donald Trump wins the presidency and the party secures control of Congress after the November election.
Environmental justice activist Saad Amer is launching the Climate Movement for Democracy to mobilize voters to address the climate crisis
The Renewable Fuels Association is pressing the Trump campaign to save Inflation Reduction Act provisions friendly to biofuels.
The debate offered a chance to see where climate policy under Trump or Harris, and, to an extent, the market may be going.
W hen millions of Americans cast their ballots on Nov. 5, they will be nudging the world in one of two directions: a difficult climate future or one that could be catastrophic. Their vote could alter the strength of hurricanes, the intensity of droughts, the rate of sea-level rise, how much land burns, and more.
Rosario Dawson, Bill Nye, Jack Schlossberg and Sophia Bush are among the bold-faced names the group Climate Power is partnering with to get voters to back Vice President Harris for her positions
Pennsylvania wants to remain a manufacturing powerhouse. But state leaders also want to reduce climate change-causing emissions from steel mills and other industrial facilities, while cutting back the toxic pollutants that cause health problems in nearby neighborhoods.
Musician and climate geek Adam Met joined EDF Action’s Fred Krupp appealing to voters outside Detroit on Sunday.