Oregon is powered by more renewable energy than ever before, has room to grow
Our new interactive dashboard allows users to explore clean energy growth in Oregon and across the country over the past decade.
We’re on the road to an electric future — and you can help drive us there.
It’s a hard truth: We simply can’t solve global warming without changing how we all get around. Transportation is now America’s No. 1 source of global warming pollution, and cars account for 60% of our transportation pollution.
The good news is that we have never been closer to an electric vehicle future than we are right now — a future where our kids ride electric buses to school, our mail and packages arrive in electric trucks, and every new car that is sold gets plugged in at night. Together, we can protect our climate by accelerating the transition to an electric vehicle future.
Our new interactive dashboard allows users to explore clean energy growth in Oregon and across the country over the past decade.
Take action
Learn more about the latest trends, research and state advocacy to help America harness its abundant renewable energy potential.
Our "Solutions to climate change" webinar series walks through what adopting clean energy technologies-- like rooftop solar, electric cars, heat pumps and induction stoves-- looks like step by step, and what incentives are available to consumers.
Vice President Kamala Harris will announce on Monday a clean schools infrastructure program, which features grant funding for public school energy upgrades, money for electric school buses, and investments in rural schools.
Reviewing all eight electric vehicle commercials from Super Bowl LVI
Our new report out today examines how the transition to electric school buses, in addition to keeping diesel exhaust out of developing lungs, could help speed up the expansion of clean energy by providing a critical source of reliable battery storage.