Was the COP28 climate meeting a cop-out – or something bigger? Jeremy Wallace - December 14, 2023 A big energy transition is coming, but not necessarily quickly.
Paying for the green transition Henry Farrell and Mark Blyth - November 27, 2023 If Trump and the Republicans win, it may be the end of the green transition in the U.S., argues Mark Blyth.
New ‘net zero’ standards could transform the climate — unless they’re derailed Thomas Hale and Jessica Green - October 3, 2021 Few people watch international bodies that set standards, but the ISO’s ‘London Declaration’ could be a big deal.
The Paris agreement survived the Trump administration. What happens now? Thomas Hale - December 11, 2020 World leaders meet this weekend to discuss how to turn promises into action
Oil companies aren’t actually going green — but some are heading there faster than others Thomas Hale, Paasha Mahdavi, Jennifer Hadden, and Jessica Green - September 17, 2020 Adopting a few climate-friendly measures is one way that companies hedge against tighter regulations
This is the biggest oil price crash in decades. That may not be great for the U.S. economy. Jeff Colgan - March 9, 2020 It will hurt American oil companies, help Middle East peace and damage U.S. relations with Saudi Arabia
Governments haven’t managed to reduce greenhouse gases. Here’s who’s taking charge in the next phase. Jeff Colgan - February 17, 2020 An uncertain climate future makes investors nervous.
The climate is changing. Here’s how politics will also change. Thomas Hale, Jeff Colgan, and Jessica Green - October 8, 2018 [caption id="attachment_78656" align="aligncenter" width="960"] A penguin stands on an iceberg
Fukuyama on Measuring Governance Erik Voeten - March 12, 2013 The journal Governance has posted a new commentary (freely available) by