Rachel Waldholz's profile photo

Rachel Waldholz

New York

Editor at NPR

Editing climate stories for @NPR. Previously @how2saveaplanet @Gimletmedia @AKEnergyDesk @AKpublicnews @RavenRadio

Featured in: Favicon npr.org Favicon washingtontimes.com Favicon post-gazette.com Favicon kentucky.com Favicon wbur.org Favicon marketplace.org Favicon newsobserver.com Favicon theworld.org Favicon thestate.com Favicon cpr.org

Articles

  • 1 month ago | defenddemocracy.press | Nate Perez |Rachel Waldholz

    By Nate Perez, Rachel WaldholzPresident Donald Trump is withdrawing the United States from the Paris Agreement — again. Under the international climate accord, first negotiated in 2015, countries around the world agreed to cut greenhouse gas emissions in an effort to limit global warming and forestall the worst impacts of climate change. Trump has argued the agreement imposes unfair burdens on the American economy, and he withdrew the U.S. during his first term in office.

  • Jan 21, 2025 | mprnews.org | Nate Perez |Rachel Waldholz

    President Donald Trump is withdrawing the United States from the Paris Agreement – again. Under the international climate accord, first negotiated in 2015, countries around the world agreed to cut greenhouse gas emissions in an effort to limit global warming and forestall the worst impacts of climate change. Trump has argued the agreement imposes unfair burdens on the American economy, and he withdrew the U.S. during his first term in office.

  • Jan 21, 2025 | npr.org | Nate Perez |Rachel Waldholz

    President Trump signed a slew of executive orders Monday after his inauguration, including an order to begin the process of withdrawing the U.S. from the Paris climate agreement. Sean Gallup/AP hide caption toggle caption Sean Gallup/AP President Donald Trump is withdrawing the United States from the Paris Agreement – again.

  • Jan 21, 2025 | flipboard.com | Nate Perez |Rachel Waldholz

    New York’s Congestion Pricing Is Working. Now Comes the Real Test. Commute times are down, and subway numbers are up. But the conservative attacks have not stopped. Congestion pricing has been decades in the making, a …

  • Oct 9, 2024 | tpr.org | Rachel Waldholz

    NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with climate reporter Rachel Waldholz about the ways in which climate change is supercharging hurricanes, including Helene and Milton.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

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 →

Coverage map

X (formerly Twitter)

Followers
2K
Tweets
1K
DMs Open
Yes
Rachel Waldholz
Rachel Waldholz @waldholz
17 Oct 23

RT @jeffbradynews: How gas utilities used tobacco tactics to avoid gas stove regulations. My latest for @NPR with editor @neelaeast and doc…

Rachel Waldholz
Rachel Waldholz @waldholz
4 Oct 23

RT @neelaeast: A big project I've been on: NPR's first Climate Solutions Week. From the Philippines to north India to Uruguay to San Jose,…

Rachel Waldholz
Rachel Waldholz @waldholz
18 Sep 23

RT @neelaeast: Why are people marching today in NYC over climate change? Who are they and what do they want? And what does it all have to d…