Hochul has touted a cap-and-trade program, dubbed “cap and invest,” to limit emissions and achieve the state’s climate goals.
Read MoreNY Renews, the Nature Conservancy and the Sierra Club also criticized the governor’s decision.
Read MoreThe NY HEAT Act (A4592) would lower utility bills for many of us, and it would help shift to cleaner heating. NY Assembly must pass this bill before June 7!
Read MoreIf New York follows California’s lead on the Clean Fuel Standard, we risk running into one of the biggest concerns arising from the program—an oversupply of credits from renewable diesel and dairy biogas that negatively disrupts fuel prices and floods methane emissions into the atmosphere.
Read MoreDespite broad support for the NY HEAT Act, which would reform utility law to accelerate electrification, the fate of the bill in the New York Assembly remains unclear, with just a few days left in the legislative session.
Read MoreFrontline climate groups – especially those led by women and people of color – are securing climate policy wins and developing clean energy projects that have the potential to dramatically reduce carbon emissions and benefit millions of people, according to The Solutions Project.
Read MoreIn the Capital District region, more than one in five residents are energy burdened. And in the Bronx, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie’s home turf, families are dealing with the twin burdens of high energy costs and skyrocketing asthma rates. Speaker Heastie has an opportunity this session to address both burdens at once. The NY HEAT Act, which would cap the cost of monthly energy bills at 6% of a household’s income and help increase the adoption of highly efficient heat pumps, is essential to keeping energy bills low and helping residents breathe cleaner air.
Read MoreWeekly Monday edition of the New York & New Jersey Energy newsletter. We’ll take a look at the week ahead and look back on what you may have missed last week.
Read MoreMany green groups are planning to keep the pressure on Assembly Democrats to pass a gas transition bill.
Read MoreOur Executive Director, Stephan Edel, was featured by Politics NY as one of 2024’s power players in climate, energy and sustainability.
Read MoreThe budget included no significant measures to address planet-warming emissions from buildings or transportation, the biggest sources of pollution in New York. Instead, there was a sales tax exemption for residential energy storage systems, a few million dollars to plant trees and marginal changes to speed up construction of transmission lines.
Read MoreNearly three weeks late on April 20, Gov. Kathy Hochul and the Legislature passed a budget that has drawn criticism from organizations specializing in housing issues and immigration, with some saying the budget falls short of what is needed to serve their communities.
Read MoreFor the third consecutive year, NYS Senator James Sanders Jr. and others stood in the Atlantic Ocean as a part of the “Tuvalu Challenge” on Saturday, April 20, to celebrate Earth Day and raise awareness about the effects of climate change on coastal communities like Rockaway.
Read MoreA few days prior, negotiations on the final New York state budget wrapped without the inclusion of big ticket climate bills that sought, on several fronts, to accelerate the state’s transition to a zero emissions economy.
Read MoreAs Earth Day came and went this week, some residents — and their representatives — expressed disappointment in what they see as the state’s failure to follow through on its pledge to limit the impacts of climate change.
Read MoreOn Wednesday, April 17, Hofstra geared up for Earth Day by hosting a panel about the portrayal of violent and non-violent climate activism in the media.
Read MoreThe Assembly rejected legislation that would have sped up New York’s transition away from gas.
Read MoreWith utility rates rising and the summer heat just around the corner, far too many Staten Islanders are struggling to pay sky-high and increasing monthly energy bills.
Read MoreAs our planet hurtles toward climate tipping points, beyond which climate chaos is irreversible, every dollar we spend on fossil fuels today takes us backwards.
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