Region: International

Touched by the Keeling Curve

Teaching the Keeling Curve in International Environmental Law has me reflecting on the role of climate science then and now.

Teaching the climate change unit last week in my International Environmental Law and Policy class, I found myself so moved that I started crying at the board. My poor students thought I was in distress. I was simply telling the story of the Keeling Curve. That’s a daily record of global atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration devised by …

CONTINUE READING

Hunting Methane Using Satellites

Joint UC Berkeley – UCLA Law report aims to help policymakers harness the methane data revolution.

A stream of data about methane—a potent greenhouse gas—is now constantly being beamed down from space. New methane satellites provide a powerful data capability for governments who want to demonstrate leadership in climate policy.  To equip policymakers with necessary information on satellite methane data, UC Berkeley Law’s Center for Law, Energy and the Environment (CLEE), …

CONTINUE READING

168 Years of Climate Science

The scientific evidence for climate change traces back before the Civil War.

Climate change is no fad or Johnny-come-lately in science.  Rather, our knowledge has grown over 168 years, since an American scientist first discovered the heat-trapping properties of carbon dioxide.Over time, it has become more and more certain that humans are causing climate change and that continuing down that road poses great risks.

CONTINUE READING

UCLA Law Professors Condemn Attacks on the Rule of Law

UCLA School of Law

A letter to students with 106 signatories expresses collective condemnation of the Trump Administration’s attacks on the rule of law.

A huge group of UCLA Law professors sent a letter to our students yesterday expressing our collective condemnation of the Trump Administration’s attacks on the rule of law.  In doing so we join colleagues from other institutions and law deans in voicing our concerns. Here is an important excerpt from the letter: Lawyers have special …

CONTINUE READING

Field Notes from India: Climate Adaptation from the Ground Up

Two days with climate educators in Ahmedabad, India changed my understanding and appreciation of climate resilience.

I spent last week in New Delhi, participating in the conference, India 2047: Building a Climate-Resilient Future. Academics, civil society, and government officials were divided into groups focusing on science, health, labor, and the built environment. It was fascinating to explore the daunting challenges India will face as many of its regions confront daily temperatures …

CONTINUE READING

Lives in the Balance: Infectious Disease and the Trump Administration

The Administration has made serious inroads on safeguards against infectious disease.

Disease control, like many other traditional government activities, has been under a MAGA-driven onslaught. Indeed, we cannot rule out the risk that rather than helping, the government will try to block the use of lifesaving vaccines.

CONTINUE READING

Disappointed in National Leadership? Look to States

With nations lagging behind on climate, states and provinces are coming up with investment opportunities to protect forests and ecosystems internationally.

Only 13 of the 195 signatory countries to the Paris Agreement submitted new national plans for tackling climate change by the recent deadline. Meanwhile President Trump has begun the process of the U.S. withdrawing from that agreement — again. This US withdrawal from global leadership is a perfect time to refocus attention and support at …

CONTINUE READING

Why Stand Up for Science? Ask Kim Stanley Robinson

A protest sign that says You Cannot Kill the Future

The acclaimed science fiction author says at a UCLA talk that Trump’s attack on science is “a murder suicide” that won’t work because “you cannot kill the future.”

One day before thousands of Americans took to the streets to protest cuts to scientific research, Kim Stanley Robinson gave a barn burner of a defense of science in the “Optimist Room” of a UCLA conference center. The author of “The Ministry for the Future,” “The Mars Trilogy,” and other books with scientists and climate …

CONTINUE READING

Two Cheers for Tariffs

Willis Hawley and Reed Smoot: Not Tree Huggers

Stupid climate mitigation is better than none.

So Donald Trump has imposed massive tariffs on Canada and Mexico, and then paused them, and then imposed them again, and then paused them — as always, he is the master of political coitus interruptus. But Canada has not backed off and is maintaining its current retaliatory tariffs: Trump has already promised more and is …

CONTINUE READING

What can we learn from EU’s battery regulation?

New CLEE report with model policies to ensure a responsible EV battery supply chain

From cars and trucks to buses and trains, electric vehicles are playing an increasingly vital role in decarbonizing mobility and reducing oil dependence However, this transition brings with it a significant challenge: the immense pressure on battery supply chains. As demand for EVs increases, consumer countries will need to develop and implement policies that address the …

CONTINUE READING

Join Our Mailing List

Climate policy is changing rapidly. Stay in the loop with expert analysis via email Monday - Friday.

TRENDING