Stay in the Know About Climate Issues
We have begun to populate this page with information to keep you up to date on Climate issues.
Divesting from Fossil Fuels
Costco Members Weclome New CEO With a Party - and a Demand to Drop Citibank (18 Jan 2024 - Inside Climate Neww)
Rooftop Solar Issues
Rooftop solar saved all ratepayers $1.49 billion in 2024!
Educate yourself about the new proposed utility fees (AB 205)
Editorial: Solar installations are plummeting in California and regulators are to blame (28 Dec 2023 - LA Times)
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Rooftop Solar (14 Dec 2023 - LA Times)
NEWSLETTERS
Boiling Point Newsletter: This newsletter written by Sammy Roth, the LA Times climate columnist, is for people who care about the environment and climate across California.
Inside Climate News has 4 different newsletters that you can subscribe to for free: ICN Weekly (Saturday delivery of the week’s climate and energy news), Inside Clean Energy (Thursday delivery of a weekly take on how to understand the energy transformation reshaping our world), Today’s Climate (a twice a week digest of the most pressing climate-related news), and Breaking News (a daily email of stories from Inside Climate News).
Carbon Brief: Stay up to date with the lastest climate news from the International Energy Agency (IEA). You have the option to subscribe to up to 4 different newsletters for free: Daily Briefing (digest of the past 24 hours of media coverage about climate change), Debriefed (essential guide to the week’s key climate developments), Cropped (fortnightly digest of news about climate change, food, land-use and nature), and China Briefing (all you need to know about climate and energy in China from the past 2 weeks).
Interfaith Power and Light sponsored this informative webinar that discusses some of the actions and agreements that came out of COP28 in Dubai, along with the pivotal role that the faith community played in pushing for greater ambition at these climate talks.
This NASA visualization shows monthly global temperature anomalies from 1880 to 2022 . Whites and blues = cooler temperatures, while oranges and reds = warmer temperatures compared to the 1951-1980 base average.