Articles

  • 1 month ago | citizensclimatelobby.org | Dana Nuccitelli |Flannery Winchester

    By Dana Nuccitelli, CCL Research CoordinatorEarlier this week, the House of Representatives passed a budget resolution, which directs all the committees in the House to either spend or cut certain amounts from their budgets for the next 10 years. The Energy & Commerce Committee, for example, was directed to cut $880 billion in spending. The question each committee now has to answer is: What spending do they cut?

  • 2 months ago | yaleclimateconnections.org | Dana Nuccitelli

    Among his Day One executive orders, President Donald Trump declared that his administration would eliminate what he called “ the ‘electric vehicle (EV) mandate,” and “promote true consumer choice” by terminating regulations and subsidies that he claimed make EVs too affordable compared to combustion-engine cars. That order could undermine efforts to decarbonize cars and trucks, which is necessary if the world is to reach net zero emissions.

  • 2 months ago | notiulti.com | Dana Nuccitelli

    Incluso si no ha sufrido daños directos, está pagando por un clima cada vez más extremo. –Por Dana nuccitelli Para las conexiones climáticas de Yale. Asheville, Carolina del Norte, fue una vez ampliamente considerado un refugio climático Gracias a su ubicación elevada y interior y temperaturas más frías que gran parte del sudeste. Luego vinieron las catastróficas inundaciones del huracán Helene en septiembre de 2024.

  • 2 months ago | earth.org | Dana Nuccitelli

    Even if you haven’t suffered direct damage, you’re paying for increasingly extreme weather. —By Dana Nuccitelli for YALE Climate Connections. Asheville, North Carolina, was once widely considered a climate haven thanks to its elevated, inland location and cooler temperatures than much of the Southeast. Then came the catastrophic floods of Hurricane Helene in September 2024.

  • Jan 14, 2025 | yaleclimateconnections.org | Dana Nuccitelli

    Asheville, North Carolina, was once widely considered a climate haven thanks to its elevated, inland location and cooler temperatures than much of the Southeast. Then came the catastrophic floods of Hurricane Helene in September 2024. It was a stark reminder that nowhere is safe from climate-worsened extreme weather risks: Hurricanes arriving from the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic seaboard. Hail in the Midwest. Floods in the East. Sea level rise along the coasts.

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Dana Nuccitelli
Dana Nuccitelli @dana1981
7 Mar 23

RT @georgina_gustin: Emissions from Ag are rising and soon Ag will become the biggest-emitting sector of the US economy, says a new @ewg st…

Dana Nuccitelli
Dana Nuccitelli @dana1981
4 Mar 23

Interesting – California, New York, and now Illinois have passed laws removing the ability of local governments to limit or ban wind and solar power, which has been a problem due to widespread disinformation https://t.co/uoffMznybK

Dana Nuccitelli
Dana Nuccitelli @dana1981
2 Mar 23

RT @hausfath: Rooftop solar is great. I have solar panels on my roof. But the majority of the solar we built in the US in the future will l…