renewable-energy

Transit Justice: The Missing Link in Climate Action

If we are serious about cutting greenhouse gas emissions, we must talk about cars. Not electric cars, not self-driving cars—cars, period. In the United States, transportation is the single largest source of carbon emissions, and the vast majority of that comes from personal vehicles.

The common climate narrative is that replacing gas-powered cars with electric ones will solve the problem. But even the cleanest EVs take up the same space, perpetuate sprawl, and demand the same resource-intensive infrastructure. Without a fundamental shift toward public transit, we risk locking ourselves into a future that is lower-carbon but still unjust, inaccessible, and unsustainable.

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When Clean Energy Fails: Planning for the Gaps in the Green Grid

On a windless August evening in Texas, solar panels still shimmered in the heat, but the sun had dipped below the horizon. The air conditioners hummed, the grid strained, and somewhere in the control room, an operator watched the renewable supply curve flatten toward zero.

This wasn’t a failure of clean energy. It was a failure of planning for the moments when clean energy isn’t there.

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