
Clare Fieseler
Reporter at @POLITICO’s E&E News covering the green energy transition. / @NatGeo Explorer / Also: I still moonlight as a marine ecologist @Smithsonian
Articles
-
Aug 1, 2024 |
bakerbotts.com | Clare Fieseler |Brian Dabbs
The Biden administration’s push to build a “clean” hydrogen industry is entering a critical phase, as multiple federal agencies ready plans in the coming months that could determine the sector’s trajectory for years — and its resulting impact on the climate. Much of the industry — and Biden’s Democratic allies on Capitol Hill — are frustrated by the Treasury Department’s delay in finalizing guidance for clean hydrogen tax credits, known as 45V for its place in the tax code.
-
Jul 10, 2024 |
theexamination.org | Craig Welch |Jana Cholakovska |Pooja Sarkar |Alec Gitelman |Clare Fieseler |Emilie Rosso
This investigation was reported in collaboration with The Post and Courier, Columbia Journalism Investigations and RTBF, and co-published in partnership with Mother Jones. Propulsion without the need for petroleum: That’s the lithium-ion battery’s promise. Backed by government incentives across the globe, lithium-ion batteries are hailed as key to a green transportation revolution — and for good reason. They cut planet-warming emissions. They promote independence from fossil fuels.
-
May 17, 2024 |
postandcourier.com | Toby Cox |Clare Fieseler
The torpedo-shaped water glider spent a month roaming the ocean off the South Carolina coast. Throughout the mission, the glider, outfitted with microphones, recorded underwater sounds nonstop. It surfaced every four hours to send acoustic snapshots by satellite to researchers listening for one sound in particular: the distinctive call of the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale.
-
Jan 13, 2024 |
postandcourier.com | Clare Fieseler |Hongyu Liu
Michelle Pate answered a 3 a.m. phone call. Even before speaking, she knew it was about a dead turtle. She also knew how it died. Only the dredge crew called in the middle of the night. Pate works for the S.C. Department of Natural Resources, and her phone serves as a sort of dead sea turtle hotline. On that day — May 6, 2021 — it rang once before dawn and four more times before dusk. Eventually, she drove to the docks of Charleston Harbor.
-
Sep 14, 2023 |
sciencemag.org | Robin J. Dart |Eric J. Topol |Sriram Balusu |Clare Fieseler
AAAS login provides access to Science for AAAS Members, and access to other journals in the Science family to users who have purchased individual subscriptions. Download and print this article for your personal scholarly, research, and educational use. Buy a single issue of Science for just $15 USD.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 3K
- Tweets
- 3K
- DMs Open
- Yes

I’m not on X much. You can find me posting on LinkedIn, Instagram and Blusky. Same handle. See ya. 😎 https://t.co/NTwQmkszoY

RT @wblau: Good climate journalism has just become twice as important.

My 5-year-old at 7am today, talking with her eyes still closed while lying in bed: “Is it Election Day, yet?” 🗳️ Same, girl. Same.