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Energy & Environment 2021: The policies, the projects, the players, the impact

"Energy & Environment 2021: The policies, the projects, the players, the impact" is a Special Advertising supplement to The Washington Times.

Recent Stories

Our commitment to a clean, resilient energy future

As we celebrate Earth Day, the American Gas Association's commitment on behalf of America's natural gas utilities to be part of the solution to the complex challenge of climate change has never been stronger.

There is no climate emergency

If you get your news only from mainstream media, you would likely believe that CO2 levels are dangerously high and unprecedented.

Rebound must be fueled by comprehensive energy infrastructure

Shortly after being sworn into office, President Biden used the power of the pen to weaken America's energy independence by rejoining the Paris Climate Agreement and killing the Keystone XL pipeline.

Time to deliver the Postal Vehicle Modernization Act

The United States Postal Service, our reeling economy, and our planet all need saving and we have a unique opportunity to make progress on all three at the same time.

Conversations about climate must include farmers

In Washington, there is a renewed focus on climate change and a desire from House Democrats and the Biden Administration to pass radical, sweeping legislation to address it.

People brave rain and heavy winds to visit the waterfront along the Jensen Beach Causeway, as conditions deteriorate with the approach of Hurricane Nicole, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2022, in Jensen Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

Nicole weakens to tropical storm over east-central Florida

- Associated Press

Shortly after Hurricane Nicole made landfall early Thursday along the east coast of Florida, it was downgraded to a tropical storm but it was still battering a large area of the storm-weary state with strong winds, dangerous storm surge and heavy rain.

Indian minister for Environment and Climate Change Bhupender Yadav attends a stocktaking plenary session at the COP26 U.N. Climate Summit in Glasgow, Scotland, Saturday, Nov. 13, 2021. Going into overtime, negotiators at U.N. climate talks in Glasgow are still trying to find common ground on phasing out coal, when nations need to update their emission-cutting pledges and, especially, on money. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

Climate consensus appears near; India objects to coal plans

- Associated Press

The Chinese delegation also said it was fine with the positions that would come out of a Glasgow in a final conference agreement. But Indian Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav potentially threw a wrench when he argued against a provision on phasing out coal-fired power plans, saying that developing countries were "entitled to the responsible use of fossil fuels."