Policy
Microsoft raises its voice on climate priorities
The technology giant declares energy and carbon policy goals, underscores role of digitization in speeding low-carbon economy transition. Read More
The climate litigation trend is gathering global momentum
New analysis reveals 80 cases have been filed against governments since 2005, seeking more ambitious action. Read More
Are Taylor Swift, Kylie Jenner and the like to blame for jet-fueled climate change?
Political leaders should leverage the private jetting industry to drive further advancements in sustainable aviation. Read More
Waste data center heat is warming up Dublin homes. Is it working?
A Dublin startup is recycling the energy released by data centers to heat homes. Can the impact be more than a drop in the bucket? Read More
Place your big bets: Long-term impacts of the Inflation Reduction Act
Five big ways in which the new U.S. climate legislation could reshape consumer behavior, economics and political alignment. Read More
How to make cities greener and cooler as temperatures soar
Building a new investment asset class of “urban forest” carbon credits to save the trees in population centers. Read More
Where was Big Tech on historic climate legislation? (The answer might surprise you)
Big Tech companies should offer strong support of bold climate policy — instead of following the lead of the trade associations that represent them. Read More
How a Fargo timber company scaled its urban wood production
By developing products that highlight the uniqueness of urban lumber while remaining small enough to be nimble, Dakota Timber has found a scalable way to reuse discarded city trees. Read More
Walmart reaches halfway to Project Gigaton
Five years in, the company's ambitious Scope 3 program hit 574 million metric tons avoided. Read More
Frameworks must embrace carbon credits to spur transition to net zero
Reporting frameworks have an important role to play in addressing quality and transparency challenges that have traditionally plagued the market. Read More