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Lessons from a year of reporting on climate solutions for Oregon, Washington and British Columbia
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Climate-warming pollution is rising in Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. Action in 2022 can get the region on track for 2030.
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Programs across Cascadia to retrofit existing buildings for energy efficiency make a difference, but the results are probably too small and too slow.
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Replacing greenhouse gas-producing fossil fuels with electricity from solar, wind or other emission-free sources is increasingly seen as the surest path to a clean energy future. But even a green city like Bellingham, Washington has learned it’s not easy to cap demand for fossil fuel.
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Proponents of a heftier, coordinated grid assess its importance – — and barriers to their visions.
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Cascadia needs cleaner fuels to start decarbonizing heavy vehicles and industry. That means pushing biofuels to the max, and more.
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This year, climate legislation remains a tense topic of debate in Pacific Northwest politics. Why has a carbon pricing program worked in British Columbia but not in Oregon?
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Plugging in more stuff can slash Cascadia’s climate-warming emissions at modest cost. But that means moving much faster.
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Indigenous activists spearhead a last-ditch effort to head off a decades-long greenhouse gas boost.
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Communities of color, low-income people and other marginalized groups are disproportionately impacted by the effects of climate change, according to community activists across Cascadia.
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Mapping programs in Cascadia show how social and racial inequities extend to climate and pollution risks.
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During a decade when Cascadia's governments failed to meet their carbon emissions goals, activists fighting fossil fuel exports exceeded their wildest expectations.
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Oregon, Washington and British Columbia pledged to slash greenhouse gas emissions. In a decade full of big talk and epic battles, they all failed.