The 2011 floods are a wake-up call to the people and government of Thailand that climate-related risks are real and here to stay, and require a serious and determined response.
The United States cannot maintain its role as a superpower if it avoids public investment in infrastructure. The gas tax is a viable way to fund those investments.
California is adopting a mix of policies, regulations, and incentives that together provide a coherent and durable framework for creating a more sustainable transportation system.
Today’s emergencies should not distract policy makers from thinking about the long-term challenges that will define the world—for the better or the worse—in the coming century.
Several aspects of China's coal value chain offers opportunities for U.S.-China collaboration to address carbon emissions.
Emerging countries must decide if they want to follow developed, auto-dependent nations down an unsustainable path or if they will instead transform their national transportation system to encourage environmentally and economically sound choices.
As a gas-importing country dependent on Russia, Ukraine could strengthen its energy security standing by diversifying its supplies of gas, increasing domestic gas production, and replacing natural gas with other fuels.
As the effects of climate change continue to impact daily life, what are the opportunities for leading carbon emitting countries to improve their energy efficiency?
Charting a global energy future requires that world navigate the inherent risks and challenges that oil, gas, nuclear, and other energy sources portend.
The enactment of an oil security tax, based on the price of oil and paid by oil companies, coupled with a consumer gas tax could help maintain America’s struggling infrastructure and support the country’s global competitiveness.