Displaying 76 - 100 of 495
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Blog post
MethaneSAT brings key tool to oil & gas operators, gives stakeholders unprecedented transparency
February 29, 2024 | Andrew Baxter, Senior Director, Business and Energy TransitionBy Andrew Baxter Methane is now a central part of the oil & gas industry’s climate challenge. New regulations in the U.S and Europe, growing concern in Asia and mounting interest from investors and global gas markets mean increasing pressure to improve emissions performance. It was also a focal point in the COP28 climate talks,More on:
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Press release
New Analysis: EPA Clean Vehicle Standards Will Save Thousands of Lives, Protect Health, Slash Air Pollution
February 28, 2024 | Ellen Robo, Manager, Transportation and Clean Air PolicyThe Environmental Protection Agency’s proposed pollution standards for new cars, buses and freight trucks would save more than 40,000 lives and prevent more than 25 million asthma attacks, according to a new analysis by Environmental Defense Fund.More on:
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Video
Ghana’s traditional fishers are using new tech to bolster climate-smart fishing
February 27, 2024Boat-mounted sensors being used off the coast of Ghana are helping fishers there deal with dwindling catches from climate change.More on:
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Blog post
Developing effective ways to measure a community’s climate resilience
February 27, 2024Co-authored by: Anushi Garg and Ravena Pernanand Anushi is the senior analyst for Environmental Defense Fund’s Climate Resilient Coasts & Watersheds program in New York-New Jersey. Ravena is a research analyst at Regional Plan Association. Across the globe, we are experiencing detrimental impacts from climate change, with low-wealth communities and communities of color hit the …More on:
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Article
This methane-hunting satellite is built to fight climate change
February 26, 2024A nonprofit set out to build a satellite that would help slow down global warming. Here’s what they made.More on:
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Blog post
Unveiling EDF’s Chemical Exposure Action Map
February 22, 2024 | Maria Doa, Senior Director, Chemicals PolicyWhat’s New Today, we are excited to introduce the Environmental Defense Fund’s (EDF) latest initiative—the Chemical Exposure Action Map. This tool is designed to spur the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to transform the assessment of risks posed by toxic chemicals in our communities. Our map focuses on multiple high-priority chemicals—making visible the urgent and long-overdue …More on:
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Blog post
Illuminating coastal seas: A new paradigm for ocean observing
February 22, 2024 | Christopher Cusack, Director, Oceans Technology SolutionsBy Christopher Cusack (EDF) and Cooper Van Vranken (Ocean Data Network) In the early hours of October 25, 2023, Hurricane Otis made landfall near Acapulco, Mexico, with peak winds of 165 mph wreaking havoc on communities in its path. Normally, people would have had a chance to prepare but just the day before, the consensus …More on:
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Press release
Chemical Exposure Action Map highlights health harms from multiple toxic chemicals
February 22, 2024 | Maria Doa, Senior Director, Chemicals PolicyEDF launched a new tool designed to help visualize health harms from multiple chemical exposures and encourage EPA to consider the fuller picture of those harms when assessing risks.More on:
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Press release
Hydrogen Could Have Much Bigger Climate Impact Than Most Estimates, Study Shows
February 21, 2024 | Steven Hamburg, Senior Vice President, Chief ScientistPress release for a new EDF study in the journal Environmental Science and Technology about the frameworks used to assess the climate impacts of hydrogen production.More on:
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Article
On thin ice: Climate change is putting hockey at risk. Players are on defense
February 7, 2024For generations, people have been playing hockey outdoors in the winter. Rising temperatures from climate change are threatening pond hockey's future, but some players are fighting back.More on:
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Article
MethaneSAT live updates: A new frontier in the climate fight
February 6, 2024A unique satellite, created by a nonprofit to fight global warming, is gearing up to launch in March 2024. Here’s everything you need to know about climate-pollution-busting MethaneSAT.More on:
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Article
This scientist is developing a satellite to fight climate change
February 4, 2024For decades, satellites have been beaming down evidence of Earth’s changing climate, with little impact. Space veteran Dan McCleese wants to change that with MethaneSAT, a satellite built for a single, critical purpose — to fight climate change.More on:
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Blog post
Our Nation’s wetlands are at risk. So is our ability to manage flooding.
February 1, 2024 | Jesse Gourevitch, High Meadows Post-Doctoral Economics FellowFollowing the Sackett v. EPA Supreme Court decision in May 2023, millions of acres of wetlands across the U.S. lost critical federal protections they once had under the Clean Water Act The post Our Nation’s wetlands are at risk. So is our ability to manage flooding. first appeared on Growing Returns.More on:
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Blog post
FDA’s latest study reaffirms short-chain PFAS biopersist. Now it must act.
January 25, 2024By Maricel Maffini, PhD, Consultant, and Tom Neltner, JD What Happened In December 2023, FDA’s scientists published a new study showing that when pregnant rats ingest a form of per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substance (PFAS) called 6:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (6:2 FTOH) their bodies break it down into other PFAS that reach the fetuses and biopersist …More on:
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Press release
New assessment of OpenET accuracy points to expanding, vital role of satellite-based water management tools
January 24, 2024 | Maurice Hall, Senior Advisor, Climate Resilient Water SystemsThe satellite-based water data platform OpenET, co-developed by EDF, demonstrates considerable accuracy in measuring evapotranspiration in agricultural settings according to a new study in Nature Water. Evapotranspiration—the amount of water lost to the atmosphere through soil evaporation and plant transpiration—is a key measure of water consumption in agriculture and has previously been difficult and expensive to monitor accurately at scale.More on:
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Blog post
Fishing for a new frontier: A data-driven future
January 23, 2024By Allison Shields (EDF), Catherine Bruger (Ocean Conservancy), and Chris McGuire (The Nature Conservancy) From smartwatches tracking our steps to news alerts on our phones to live traffic updates while driving, data has become central to our daily lives and how we interact with the world. For fishermen traveling miles offshore in search of fish,More on:
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Blog post
Extreme heat’s impacts on farm financial outcomes in Kansas
January 17, 2024Understanding the impacts of extreme weather on Kansas farms can inform solutions that support farmers in adapting to climate change.More on:
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Blog post
Increasing extreme heat is hurting Kansas farmers’ bottom line
January 17, 2024 | Mai Lan Hoang, Climate-Smart Agriculture Research AnalystDuring the summer of 2023, Kansas endured a historic heat wave with temperatures soaring above 110°F in some areas. As climate change continues to intensify, the frequency and severity of extreme heat are projected to increase. Are Kansas farmers at risk of losing money in the face of these extreme growing conditions? A new study …More on:
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Press release
Farmers face 66% income loss from rising temperatures in Kansas
January 17, 2024Climate change is expected to bring more severe weather, like droughts and extreme heat, to Kansas in the coming decades, with significant negative impacts on farm productivity and profitability. EDF's new research shows the financial risk to Kansas farms posed by extreme heat, and how management decisions and government programs partially mitigate the negative impacts.More on:
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Press release
Petition: FDA Must Stop Allowing Four Cancer-Causing Chemicals in Food
January 11, 2024Today the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) published an announcement that it filed food-additive and color-additive petitions from EDF and partners that call on the agency to rescind its approvals for four carcinogens in food.More on:
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Press release
Analysis Finds U.S. Electric Vehicle Battery Manufacturing on Track to Meet Demand
January 3, 2024An analysis by Environmental Defense Fund finds that enough U.S. battery production capacity has already been announced to supply all the electric vehicles – both cars and trucks – expected to be sold in 2030.More on:
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Blog post
Hydrogen hubs are here. What do communities think about them?
December 15, 2023 | Chelcie Henry-Robertson, Senior Analyst, Federal Climate InnovationIn October, the White House announced the selection of seven Hydrogen Hubs around the U.S. to be a part of the Department of Energy (DOE)’s Regional Clean Hydrogen Hubs Program (H2Hubs), which will deploy $7 billion toward projects over eight to twelve years (or sooner). Launched under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the Hydrogen Hubs program …More on:
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Blog post
New platform seeks to prevent ocean conflict in the face of climate change
December 12, 2023By Jacqui Vogel (EDF) and Dr. Sarah Glaser (WWF) Oceans are under immense threat from climate change. Around the world, oceanographic changes like melting sea ice, warming waters, sea level rise and shifting fish populations make access to marine resources more uncertain and less secure. Climate change threatens to disrupt the communities, supply chains and …More on:
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Press release
Environmental Defense Fund to Explore the Treasures of the Ocean’s Twilight Zone at COP28
December 7, 2023 | Eric Schwaab, Senior Vice President, People and NaturePanel will discuss emerging science and policy considerations for this critical ecosystemMore on:
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Press release
Analysis: If Leading Governors Turn Climate Pledges into Policy, States Can Shrink U.S. Emissions Gap to Paris Target in Half
December 5, 2023 | Pam Kiely, Associate Vice President, U.S. RegionNew emissions analysis from EDF, which uses 2023 projections from Rhodium Group, assesses the collective impact that U.S. states with climate commitments could have and how far they need to go to reach their own targets.More on: