Displaying 1 - 25 of 108
1
Article
Attacks against ESG reporting have done little to dampen investors’ demand for consistent and comparable sustainability information.
2
Article
Investors bet big on carbon accounting and emissions reporting with Watershed Technology.
by Leah Garden
3
Article
Businesses were required to start reporting emissions and risks in 2026, but a budget proposal would push that back.
by Leah Garden
4
Article
The legislation will require corporations operating in the state to disclose Scope 3 emissions by 2027.
by Leah Garden
5
Article
Developing sector-based benchmarks for issuing carbon credits would open markets to emerging companies and mark significant progress toward Paris Agreement goals.
by Lee Recht
6
Article
Bidirectional charging is needed for a stable grid, but its ability to scale is trapped in the pilot stage.
by AJ Artis
7
Article
Proposed legislation would require disclosures of Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions by both private and public companies with more than $1 billion in annual revenue that do business in California.
8
Article
Labor and environmentalists seek skill standards to ensure safety, high road jobs.
9
Article
Covering all 4,000 miles of the state's canals with solar panels would save more than 65 billion gallons of water annually by reducing evaporation, one study showed.
by Roger Bales
10
Article
Experts agree that cities need diverse water supplies, but desalination plants remain controversial.
11
Article
Lessons from a regional multi-stakeholder assessment for electrifying homes in California's San Mateo County.
12
Article
Pollution, poverty and race collide in many other disadvantaged communities across California — and the country — and some argue that the state’s climate policies haven’t helped.
by Julia Rosen
13
Article
Walk outside, talk a deep breath, and then get back to the business of sustainability.
15
Article
Of the 20 million acres the U.S. Forest Service manages in California, up to 9 million acres need to be restored.
by Roger Bales
16
Article
Recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic, the climate emergency and racial injustice requires including underserved communities in the planning process.
17
Article
Over a dozen former Tesla execs have gone on to establish EV and energy-related startups of their own.
18
Article
Smart policy, planning and market designs are critical so that utilities and customers can improve reliability through accelerated deployment of advanced clean resources as fossil generators retire.
by Bryn Baker
19
Article
To address both near-term reliability threats and emerging climate risks, the state needs to move both more carefully and faster.
by Mark Dyson
20
Article
From New York to Los Angeles, Minneapolis to the Gulf Coast, people of color suffer disproportionately from pollution, callous government and climate change.
21
Article
The California Air Resources Board (CARB) unanimously adopted the rule, which requires truck makers to sell an increasing number of clean, zero-emission trucks in the state.
22
Article
The 1880s brought on state supreme court rulings and dramatically changed marshes.
23
Article
As many people in the U.S. shelter-in-place in their homes, farmworkers are at risk of becoming severely ill from the coronavirus as they continue to support the country's food supply chain.
24
Article
This is leadership for the climate and for mobility.
25
Article
From ceremonies to harvesting and food storage, to political leadership, to gender relations, indigenous groups have detailed understandings of how design societal institutions to support resilience. But colonialism changed that.