Andrew Harnik/Getty Images June 18, 2025 What We’re Watching: Coming Historic Heat Plus Acute Risks Could Make Rest of June a Hot Mess Expected extreme heat in US was made more likely by climate change. Erika Spanger Director of Strategic Climate Analytics
Brandon Bell/Getty Images June 17, 2025 Worsening Wildfires Contribute to Increasingly Unaffordable Insurance and Housing Costs Rachel Cleetus Policy Director
Julien Goettelmann/Unsplash June 17, 2025 Railroads Are Running Dirty Diesel Trains Through Communities and No One Is Doing Anything About It Dave Cooke Senior Vehicles Analyst
March 24, 2021 What I Told Congress: Five Ways to Rebuild Scientific Capacity in Federal Agencies Andrew Rosenberg Former Contributor
Melody Tan March 24, 2021 The Science Policy Community’s Responsibility to Address Anti-Asian Xenophobia UCS Science Network
Backbone Campaign/Flickr March 19, 2021 ExxonMobil Versus Chevron: Fight for Second-to-Last Place Among Fossil Fuel Companies Has Begun Nicole Pinko Former Contributor
March 18, 2021 Censorship of Federal Environmental Agency Websites Under Trump: What We Learned and How to Protect Public Information Moving Forward UCS Science Network
truthout.org March 17, 2021 Let’s Toast to Open Government—It’s Sunshine Week! Taryn MacKinney Former Contributor
Will von Dauster, NOAA March 17, 2021 What Xcel’s Western Coal Fleet Can Learn From its Northern One Joseph Daniel Former Contributor
USDA/Preston Keres March 16, 2021 3 Research Questions Could Hold the Key to Sustainable Eating Sarah Reinhardt Former Contributor
Jonathan Cutrer/Flickr March 16, 2021 The Texas Power Outages Were A “Wake-Up Call” Only Because Decisionmakers Everywhere Keep Hitting Snooze Julie McNamara Associate Director, Policy for Climate and Energy
Scarc/Shutterstock March 16, 2021 Masking the Danger: States Dismantle COVID-19 Safety Protocols at Our Peril Derrick Z. Jackson Fellow
Eleanor Fort/UCS March 15, 2021 Why Scientists Shouldn’t Heed Calls to “Stay in Our Lane” UCS Science Network
NRDC pix March 12, 2021 A Win for Public Health: EPA Breathes New Life into Long-awaited Formaldehyde Study Genna Reed Former Staff
Baltimore County Government March 11, 2021 Ask a Scientist: Pandemic Maps Tell the Story of Racial Inequity Elliott Negin Former Contributor
Creative Commons/European Wind Energy Association (Flickr) March 10, 2021 US Offshore Wind’s Next Step Forward: A Project, a Plan, and a Pathway John Rogers Energy Campaign Analytic Lead
Juan Declet-Barreto March 10, 2021 123 Years Later, the Unfinished Business of Self-Determination for Puerto Ricans Juan Declet-Barreto Senior Social Scientist for Climate Vulnerability
Johnson Banks/COP26 March 10, 2021 US Should Pledge to Cut Heat-trapping Emissions At Least 50 Percent Below 2005 Levels by 2030 Rachel Cleetus Policy Director
Open Grid Scheduler/flickr March 10, 2021 Gov. Newsom’s Proposal to Invest $1 Billion in ZEV Infrastructure is a Smart Proposition Jason Barbose Former Contributor
March 9, 2021 New Maps Highlight Inequitable Rollout of COVID-19 Vaccines Casey Kalman Former Contributor
Photo: Marii Siia/Unsplash March 8, 2021 Who’s to Blame for a $10,000 Electric Bill? Joseph Daniel Former Contributor
Jim Bowen/flickr March 8, 2021 Three Ways Climate Disclosure Helps Everyone Nicole Pinko Former Contributor
Will Brown March 5, 2021 The FHFA Begins to Reckon with Climate Risks to the Housing Market Rachel Cleetus Policy Director
Vlad Tchompalov/Unsplash March 4, 2021 We Must Urgently Build an Inclusive Science Advocacy Movement Fernando Tormos-Aponte Former Staff
Sam Houston/UCS March 3, 2021 Federal Policy For Charging Access: A Tale of Two EV Drivers Samantha Houston Senior Vehicles Analyst
US Department of the Interior March 3, 2021 Science Wins at the Interior Department Jacob Carter Former Contributor
Ford Media Center March 3, 2021 Three Truths About Electric Vehicles David Reichmuth Senior Engineer, Clean Transportation Program