Devin Moroney's profile photo

Devin Moroney

United States

Podcast Producer at Courier

Articles

  • Dec 19, 2023 | thebluegrasssituation.com | Devin Moroney |Justin Hiltner

    I call January my reading month. To be clear, I do of course still scan words and decipher syntax throughout the remaining 11 months that fill the calendar, but I always seem to start and finish the most books in the first month of the year. I don’t think it’s because I have a romantic notion of what my new self will be like in this new year – always reading and writing more or doing xyz to “better” myself (though if I’m being honest, that’s probably part of it).

  • Mar 13, 2023 | climatenow.com | Devin Moroney

    Summary– Reif Larsen, Founder of The Future of Small Cities Institute, kicks off the episode by laying out why the task at hand is a tall order. “Decarbonization is an incredibly complicated task because it’s a political one…It’s about social justice…technology…workforce…community development.

  • Mar 6, 2023 | climatenow.com | Devin Moroney

    On February 15, 2023, the U.S. Senate held a hearing considering a national clean fuels program, modeled after California’s state-wide Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS). The LCFS sets an annually decreasing standard of net carbon intensity (amount CO2 emissions per unit energy) for all the fuels being sold in the state. Companies that produce fuels or fuel equivalents below the carbon intensity threshold can sell low-carbon fuel credits.

  • Feb 27, 2023 | climatenow.com | Devin Moroney

    Transcript:James Lawler: Welcome to Climate Now, a podcast that explores and explains the ideas, technologies, and the practical on the ground solutions that we’ll need to address the climate crisis and achieve a net zero future. I’m James Lawler. If you like this episode, leave us a review, share it with your friends, or tell us what you think at [email protected]. Today, we’re going to be talking about electrifying municipal and commercial truck and bus fleets.

  • Feb 20, 2023 | climatenow.com | Devin Moroney

    More than one third of the world’s 2,000 largest publicly traded companies have made some kind of net-zero commitment, and the list is growing quickly. A critical part of those corporate plans will be securing cleanly sourced electricity for their energy needs, but that requires that there is enough fossil-free electricity available on the grid for every company that prefers to use it.