A surge in energy-intensive computing threatens America’s renewable energy transition
We must not allow wasteful new uses of energy to derail our efforts to get off dirty and dangerous fuels
There's no reason to accept the risks or high costs of nuclear power, given the abundance of renewable energy that is cleaner, safer and more affordable than nuclear.
We must not allow wasteful new uses of energy to derail our efforts to get off dirty and dangerous fuels
Environment, public interest advocates urge support for cleaner, safer, less costly renewable energy
Stanford Professor Mark Jacobson and Environment America’s Johanna Neumann discuss how today’s technologies can achieve 100% renewable energy
The 2019 hurricane season officially gets underway tomorrow (June 1) with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) predicting between 4 and 8 hurricanes this year. On the heels of the devastating Hurricane Florence and Hurricane Michael in 2018, The Public Interest Network (which includes U.S. PIRG, Environment America, and state groups in often-impacted states such as Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Texas and Virginia) is sharing information to help contextualize the major environmental, health and consumer concerns posed by the hurricanes that will inevitably come this season.