Why did the Biden Administration's major climate wins fail to translate into a positive campaign talking point? It might be the messaging.
More than 60 countries – home to nearly half the planet’s population – selected their leaders. In the history of democracy, it is a first. What can we learn from the results?
A majority of American voters are concerned about the climate crisis, but almost nobody votes based on it, writes. If we don’t embark on a crash course to dramatically increase the climate movement’s political power,
Biden's most recent climate initiatives are all but certain to be short-lived, mostly thanks to an obscure law that tends to come into play every four years.
Australia’s new targets for carbon emission cuts by 2035 are expected to be delayed by several months as a result of Donald Trump’s return to the White House, likely pushing them out beyond the next election which is due to be held by May.
They were seeking “a full leaders’ [election] debate devoted exclusively to [climate] and driven by an audience selected explicitly to represent future generations who are entirely reliant on ...
CLIMATE RECKONING — A series of recent events is challenging a basic assumption adopted after Donald Trump won a second term last month: Blue states and Europe would pick up the climate mantle amid efforts in Washington to reverse progress.
The election of Donald Trump, his statements on climate change and positions on energy policy are likely to have a global impact,” warns Climate Change Authority chair Matt Kean.
The exact timing is very much up in the air, but the best bet is for the government to fall by late March, and then a general election day would fall in April or May, said Yaroslav Baran, co-founder of the Pendulum Group and former chief of staff to Conservative house leader Jay Hill.
With President-elect Donald Trump’s victory in the United States, international climate diplomacy is at a crossroads — similarly to when in 2017, during Trump’s first term, the United States withdrew from the Paris Agreement on combating climate change.
From climate action to housing solutions, the coming year promises innovations, breakthroughs, and setbacks. Here are 7 transformative ideas that could shape 2025.
Canadians must not be deterred from making climate action a ballot-box issue in 2025, despite a U.S. election that saw a climate-change denier win the presidency