Herd Immunity
What Could Possibly Go Wrong with Trump’s Latest Coronavirus Idea?
"Herd immunity" seems to be gaining ground in the White House as a coronavirus strategy. The idea is to protect the vulnerable population, while letting the virus run its course among the rest. The disease then dies out because so many people are immune. What could possibly go wrong? In theory, this idea would work, if having a mild or asymptomatic case gives long-term immunity, and if the vulnerable can be fully protected. We’re not positive about the first ass...
CONTINUE READINGRed Paint Would Curb Public Access to Palos Verdes Nature Preserve, One of Los Angeles County’s Most Significant Open Spaces
Rancho Palos Verdes City Council votes to restrict public street parking near Portuguese Bend Reserve
See a full set of photos illustrating parking restrictions at Portuguese Bend Reserve on the Emmett Institute Flickr page. At its Sept. 1 meeting, the Rancho Palos Verdes City Council responded to public concern about its new parking restrictions by voting unanimously to move away from a full parking prohibition and remove a limited number of parking spaces along Crenshaw Blvd. Using COVID-19 for cover, the City of Rancho Palos Verdes took steps this...
CONTINUE READINGBattle for the Senate: The Environmental Stakes in Arizona
In an election that could determine control of the Senate, the candidates’ views are far apart.
In Arizona, the Senate race pits two former military pilots against each other. The Republican incumbent is not as rabidly anti-environmental as some of her colleagues, but clearly is no fan of regulation. Her opponent is committed to fighting climate change and seems open to major federal investment in renewable energy. Martha McSally. The incumbent Republican was appointed to fill out Jon Kyle’s term and now faces a special election. Following a military career, s...
CONTINUE READINGTime to Get Serious about Climate Change and Oceans
Science can unlock powerful tools to fight climate change and ocean acidification, but only if we fund research and govern it well.
In the Before Time, I spoke with a few ocean scientists on climate issues, and I heard a common refrain. Climate change receives little attention or funding, considering the magnitude of the problem; climate impacts on oceans get even less; and marine carbon removal gets almost none at all. Humans are short-lived terrestrial creatures. When we do think about climate change, we tend to focus on its immediate impacts on land, like hurricanes, heatwaves, dr...
CONTINUE READINGFighting for Clean Air in Imperial County, California
UCLA Emmett faculty team up with environmental justice group to file amicus brief in Clean Air Act case.
Air pollution has devastating health effects in many of California’s inland communities. That’s the case for rural Imperial County, where one in five children suffer from asthma, double the state rate, due to high levels of air pollution from highway traffic, farming and livestock operations, desert dust, and industry in Mexicali, a large city just across the U.S.-Mexico border. Environmental and health advocacy groups recently sued EPA to require stronger air...
CONTINUE READINGBattle for the Senate: Too Close to Call in Maine
Control of the Senate may hinge on this race.
The 2020 Senate race pits Republican incumbent Susan Collins against Sarah Gideon. Collins is far more environment-friendly than her GOP colleagues. That still makes her much less so than Joe Manchin (D-W. Va.) on the other side of the aisle. In contrast, Gideon supports much stronger climate action. Susan Collins. Collins is an outlier among Senate Republicans in her environmental views. Her campaign website doesn’t have an issues tab, which seems fairly usual amon...
CONTINUE READINGHurricanes, Wildfires, Climate Change and the Republican “Platform” and Convention
No Acknowledgment of the Biggest Environmental Existential Threat We've Ever Faced
Hurricane Laura is barreling down on Louisiana and Texas, bringing with it "unsurvivable storm surges" and "life-threatening hazards" to parts of the Gulf Coast. Louisiana Governor Jon Bel Edwards is imploring residents to evacuate: "This is a very serious storm -- I don't think I have ever held a press conference to take something as seriously as I am right now. Our state hasn't seen a storm surge like this in many decades. Same with wind speeds." Northern C...
CONTINUE READINGSherlock Holmes and the Mystery of the Job-Killing Regulations
In which Holmes confronts his strangest and most perplexing case.
[I'm re-upping this 2014 post since the "job-killing regulation" meme has resurfaced at the GOP Convention. The scene is Holmes's apartment at 221B Baker Street.] “When the prospective client arrives, Watson, you’ll find that he’s a politician, that his electoral base is devoted to Fox News, and that he gets campaign contributions from fossil fuel companies.” “Zounds, man, how could you possibly know that?” “A calculated risk,” Holmes said. ...
CONTINUE READINGGuest Contributor Naomi Wheeler: States and Cities Should Prioritize Equity While Building Grid Resilience
Learning from Grid Resilience Threats and Opportunities in California and New York
Electrical grids across the country face a complex series of overlapping threats to grid resilience in 2020. Wildfires and hurricanes have become the new normal as climate change intensifies the magnitude of extreme weather events. These destructive events create widespread systemic shocks for electrical grids already facing several underlying vulnerabilities. In a recent research report, I present case studies of grid resilience threats and opportunities for Californ...
CONTINUE READINGLet’s Talk Coordinated Governance
Chinese policymakers learn from California’s pioneering work on air and climate regulation.
We are pleased to announce the launch of a new report on Coordinated Governance of Air and Climate Pollutants: Lessons from the California Experience – authored by me, David Pettit at NRDC, and Siyi Shen. The report is an effort to introduce California’s experience in air and climate regulation to Chinese regulators and researchers. In 2018, China’s Ministry of Ecology & Environment gained regulatory authority over climate change regulation that had previously ...
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