Press Archives
As Quoted
How Booming Electricity Demand Is Stalling Efforts To Retire Coal And Gas, In Charts
EI’s Michelle Solomon discusses how expanding coal and gas power is not the best option to deal with increasing electricity demand due to limited capacity and the high costs.
The U.S. Government Is Still Spending Big On Climate
EI’s Jack Conness discusses the $100 billion that the Inflation Reduction Act has allocated to 159 projects since it’s passage in August 2022.
Geothermal Energy Storage Is Making A Big Leap In Texas
Recent analysis by EI finds that enacting policies from Project 2025 would result in 1.7 million fewer jobs, 2,000 pollution-related premature deaths, and boost U.S. emissions by about 780 million metric tons per year by 2030.
The Hidden Reason Why Your Power Bill Is So High
EI’s Brendan Pierpont discusses finding that utility companies are not expanding the grid in a way that would benefit clean energy producers.
Trump’s Weird “Nuclear” Moment With Elon Musk Gives Kamala An Opening
EI’s Jack Conness discusses how manufacturing jobs supporting clean energy growth are concentrated in purple or red states.
Project 2025’s Climate Cuts Would Cost Americans Billions Of Dollars Per Year
EI’s Robbie Orvis explains that policies outlined in Project 2025 will increase household energy spending and increase U.S. emissions by about 780 million metric tons per year by 2030.
Project 2025 Policies Would Erase Biden’s Climate Gains, Report Finds
EI’s Robbie Orvis explains recent findings that under a Project 2025 scenario, U.S. emissions would be about 18 percent higher by 2030 than they would under current policies.
Goodbye Clean Air, Hello Spiking Electric Bills: America’s Climate Reality Under Project 2025
Recent modeling by EI finds that current climate policy puts the United States within their 2030 emissions goals, but that Project 2025’s climate policy would rollback this progress.
Trump’s Project 2025 Promises Billions Of Tonnes More Carbon Pollution – Study
EI analysis finds that Project 2025 could result in billions of tonnes of extra carbon pollution.
Project 2025 Promises More Carbon Emissions and Fewer Jobs, New Report Finds
EI research finds that Project 2025 would increase U.S. carbon emissions by 2.7 billion metric tons by 2030 and cause there to be 1.7 million fewer jobs in that year, compared to the current trajectory.