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The Latest

#159 August 2022/Energy

Homeowners — some affluent, some impoverished — lead the way with homes using electricity exclusively

I realized also that besides protesting I had to clean up my own act. If I was buying natural gas, I was complicit.” — Judy Wicks, climate activist and former owner of the White Dog Cafe When Judy Wicks, the former owner of the White Dog Cafe, got back from the Standing Rock Indian Reservation

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August 1, 2022
6 mins read
#159 August 2022/Energy

Sponsored Content: Vicinity Energy’s district steam loop is planning to use more sustainable energy to heat and cool Philadelphia’s buildings

As we feel the effects of extreme heat and extreme weather, we can no longer delay action. But Philadelphians may not realize that major emissions reductions are happening below our feet everyday. For over 100 years, an innovative and sustainable district energy system has operated throughout much of Center City and parts of University City

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August 1, 2022
2 mins read
#159 August 2022/Energy

A Philadelphia Energy Authority program is making solar possible for all Philadelphians

Aquick glance at today’s headlines reveals many issues that stress or divide us: inflation, gas prices, gun violence, climate change, the pandemic and reproductive rights, to name a few. But before you give in to despair, here’s something positive we can rally around: solar power. A recent statewide poll shows that 81% of Pennsylvanians indicated

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August 1, 2022
4 mins read
#159 August 2022/Editor's Notes

Editor’s Notes: Grounded in Reality

I’ve been grappling with Vaclav Smil’s provocative book, “How The World Really Works: The Science Behind How We Got Here and Where We’re Going.” Smil, a professor at the University of Manitoba, has written dozens of books on big topics including population, food and energy, usually with scientists or public policy professionals in mind. This

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August 1, 2022
2 mins read
#159 August 2022/Energy

Olde Kensington-based solar installer creates green, local, stable jobs

The “big story of solar,”according to Micah Gold-Markel, is not about slashing carbon footprints or lowering energy bills. “Yes, people can save money,” concedes the founder of Solar States LLC. “Yes, they can save the planet, but really they can do the most good because they’re saving their communities with good-paying jobs.” Inspired by the

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August 1, 2022
4 mins read
#159 August 2022/Water

Abandoned mines spewing toxic water is the unwanted legacy of coal

Acloudy pool of water marks the spot where, every minute, about 1,200 gallons of toxic mine drainage, contaminated with sulfuric acid and iron, flows out of the ground in the hills above New Philadelphia, in Schuylkill County. Below lies a flooded mine void, the space where miners extracted tons of anthracite coal from the ground

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August 1, 2022
5 mins read
#159 August 2022

Incinerating trash produces vast amounts of smog. Philadelphia needs to stop doing it

If Philadelphia wants to advance its goal of confronting environmental racism, we have to stop sending hundreds of thousands of tons of trash a year to be incinerated and landfilled. Waste incineration is a massive source of greenhouse gases and smog-causing air pollution. Next year, the City of Philadelphia has the option not to renew

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August 1, 2022
2 mins read
#159 August 2022/Politics

Pennsylvania is the first major fossil fuel state to enter the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative

Pennsylvania’s recent entry into the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) made it the first major fossil fuel-producing state to join, but the move had its share of detractors. After much legal and public debate, the agreement has been put into effect. Here’s everything you need to know. What is RGGI? The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

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August 1, 2022
4 mins read
#159 August 2022/Energy

Can Philadelphia workers and environmentalists achieve a just transition to net zero?

Transitioning our economy to one that supports well-paying jobs and a healthy planet certainly seems like a concept that most people can get behind. So why has the term “just transition” been so controversial and rejected by many? The principle of just transition is that a healthy economy and clean environment can and should coexist.”

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August 1, 2022
3 mins read
#159 August 2022/Energy

Can the City overcome entrenched interests at Philadelphia Gas Works to address climate change?

In 2019, after similar bans had been enacted in other cities, a draft of a bill to end gas hookups in new construction in Philadelphia was put on the desk of Councilmember Katherine Gilmore Richardson, the head of City Council’s Committee on the Environment. Designed to speed the transition from fossil fuels, it seemed like

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August 1, 2022
12 mins read
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