In fighting climate change, major IPCC report finds every little bit matters

In fighting climate change, major IPCC report...

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How GHG Protocol's emissions standards for business are evolving

The Greenhouse Gas Protocol has developed the world's most widely used greenhouse gas accounting standards and guidance since launching in 1998 as a joint initiative of the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD). In this ...  Show more

CERAWeek sneak peek: What's ahead for energy and sustainability

How do you balance near-term energy priorities with the long-term reality of climate change and nature loss? That's the big sustainability question we're asking in 2026, and in today's episode of the All Things Sustainable podcast, we sit down with Daniel Yergin to explore the an ...  Show more

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Defeating Doomerism: The Search For A New Climate Narrative
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On the last Energy Gang we looked at the impact of record temperatures on the energy sector. This week, we discuss another impact of climate change: its effect on human psychology. We discuss how the way we talk about global warming affects how we respond to it.

A recent ...

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Climate Change is Shaping Our Most Important Decisions in the Energy Transition
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The energy industry influences climate change, and climate change also influences the energy industry. Understanding the consequences of a warming world is essential for making the right decisions as trillions of dollars are invested in energy production around the world. Whil ...

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Why This IPCC Climate Report Is Different
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The world’s most scrutinized and peer-reviewed document is out: the IPCC report on climate change. 

Thousands of scientists have spent decades pouring over every measurement and research report known. <a href="https://www.carbonbrief.org/explainer-what-the-new-ipcc- ...

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Climate expert Mark Lynas on the 'final nail in the coffin' of climate denial; media coverage of COP26; and more
Reliable Sources

Nearly a decade ago, an influential review of climate-related studies found a 97% consensus about man's impact on climate change. Now a new review, led by Mark Lynas, has found a 99.9% consensus. Lynas says the science is so settled that "it is case closed." Republicans "undermin ...  Show more