When 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.
Washington Gov. Jay Onslee chats with Western Washington University officals during a tour of the Steam Plant to check on Climate Commitment Act progress. Inslee and WWU officials went to the Steam Plant and its underground tunnels and to the new Kaiser-Borsari Building on Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2024. Robert Mittendorf The Bellingham Herald
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 on energy and the environment.
The debate offered a chance to see where climate policy under Trump or Harris, and, to an extent, the market may be going.
A partnership of environmental groups is launching an advertising campaign focused on getting young people in swing states to vote for Democrat Kamala Harris for president.
KING 5 fact checked some of the claims made by the Bob Ferguson and Dave Reichert during the debate on Sept. 10.
The initiative, launching today, is designed to engage, educate and motivate people to vote for climate and clean energy champions in the upcoming elections.
Both sported a drill, baby, drill attitude—but Harris, unlike Trump, views global warming as a serious threat.
"The folks we’re electing right now have a responsibility to you to think about the future," Walz told a group of young Democrats in East Lansing.
Administration officials are holding Climate Corps events in several states, including Pennsylvania, Michigan and North Carolina.
Climate change does not poll well so Vice President Kamala Harris is downplaying the whole issue. Gone is the drumbeating