Feb 1, 2017Any one of these projects would have been the largest battery storage facility ever built. Combined, they amount to 15 percent of the battery storage installed planet-wide last year.
↩︎ Bloomberg
California is America's greatest hope for climate change reform.
- In push for investors to disclose carbon risks, California moves ahead of the pack. Updated Feb 6, 2017 ago
- A revolution in battery storage doesn't come from bigger batteries, just more of them.
- On climate change, the contrast between California and national policy couldn't be starker–and that's a huge opportunity.
In push for investors to disclose carbon risks, California moves ahead of the pack.
The state insurance commissioner unveiled a tool for his charges to assess exposure to investments that will decline as the climate changes and the economy shifts. Insurers, who are required to make low-risk investments, have already started to shy away from fossil fuels, particularly coal. The move is part of a worldwide push from financial and political institutions concerned about macroeconomic stability in a changing climate.
On climate change, contrast between California and national policy couldn't be starker–and that presents a huge opportunity.
"Today, we wake up as strangers in a foreign land," began the somber speech prepared by California's top Democrats after Trump's win.
This profile of Sacramento's gathering response is really worth the read. Notably, the state is confident the law will continue to allow them to go out in front of rolled-back EPA regulations, and Jerry Brown's lieutenants are convinced the grizzled governor will attack climate change with a referendum soon.
"He has every incentive to do it,” says Gavin Newsom. “This is the opportunity of a lifetime to strengthen his legacy on the existential issue of our time.”
Even some conservatives support a national carbon price, but it's unlikely with this Congress.
It's not surprising that California has asked the country to tax carbon pollution. You may also have heard the Rex Tillerson, incoming secretary of state, supports a price on carbon; the weight behind his declarations is questionable, but the National Review sees him as positively green. Elon Musk, friend of Peter Thiel, also promotes the policy.
But while think-tank Republicans propose swapping corporate taxes for a carbon price, the reality is that most Republicans are bound by pledges not to add new taxes.
In California, electric vehicles finally have the infrastructure they need to succeed.
California, like the rest of the nation, has sputtered on reaching electric vehicle goals. Unlike the rest of the country, it is taking proactive steps to fix what's wrong. These include allowing utilities to build charging stations, directing subsidies towards lower income brackets, and targeting heavy industry applications.
Los Angeles and San Francisco are leading the charge by making a huge order of EVs for their municipal fleets.
The Editors' Longreads Picks
- An excellent essay on poverty and writing by Starr Davis. Updated May 31, 2022
- Novelist Héctor Tobar tries to understand the 1992 Los Angeles riots through the experiences of a single high school.
- Steven Johnson with a long assessment of the current state of A.I. and language. (The illusion has gotten very good.)
Welcome to The Morning News Tournament of Books, 2017 edition.
- Our championship match is decided in the Tournament of Books, with news of a Rooster surprise debuting this summer. Updated Mar 31, 2017
- In Thursday's action, Reyhan Harmanci sets up a colossal final.
- The Zombie round opens with Buzzfeed's Isaac Fitzgerald reading The Nix and The Underground Railroad.
Все ваши Белый дом принадлежит нам.
- "Will Putin expose the failings of American democracy or will he inadvertently expose the strength of American democracy?" Updated Mar 3, 2017
- Wilbur Ross just wanted to make some money in ethically gray areas (that should've prevented him from taking office).
- Jeff Sessions's spokeswoman can't help but continue to lie.
The oceans are under assault, and not just from the White House and friends.
- Trump's assault on the environment begins with American headwaters. Updated Mar 1, 2017
- Don't just blame the oil companies for destroying the oceans—blame sushi restaurants.
- Nothing escapes the deepest trenches of the ocean floor. Not light, not nutrients, not pollutants.