Presidential campaigns have instead focused on other key election issues like the economy, immigration and foreign policy.View on euronews
The presidential race features unusually sharp contrasts by the candidates on whether to address rising temperatures.
Climate change is causing wildfires in the West to get bigger, hurricanes in the South to get stronger, and temperatures to rise across the U.S. But when candidates talk about the issue on the campaign trail,
French oil major TotalEnergies does not anticipate that Donald Trump would pull the U.S. out of the Paris Agreement on climate change or undo Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) legislation if he became U.S.
No matter who wins the U.S. election, companies will have greater success if they talk about the financial impact of climate change.
Trump promises to accelerate oil and gas production and reverse Biden’s environmental policies. Scientists say we must get off fossil fuels as quickly as possible.
Activists would push a new Republican administration to boost coal-fired power, block EPA science and challenge models of global warming.
In this week's Current Climate newsletter, the election's climate choice, Elon Musk's Tesla embrace tarnishes Tesla, and climate scientist Michael Mann on what's at stake with the election
At a speech in September highlighting the GOP’s “100 day” agenda, Johnson spoke in more detail about his party’s vision to roll back Biden era environmental regulations and expand oil and gas drilling in pursuit of U.S. “energy dominance” and increased national security.
The 2024 presidential contest and other major political races are coming to a climax; North Carolina sits among the most contested of battleground states as the final votes are cast.
A second Trump administration could stop defending the E.P.A. against lawsuits attacking its climate policies. Other effects might be more far-reaching.
The contortions required to knit electoral-college victory paths always make campaigns a lousy barometer of what presidents can and will do in office.