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<font size="+2"><font face="Calibri"><i><b>October </b></i></font></font><font
size="+2" face="Calibri"><i><b>19, 2023</b></i></font><font
face="Calibri"><br>
</font> <br>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ cough, cough, hack, and spit -- yes - both
governments and US press seem to have overlooked this news story
- thank you Guardian ]<br>
</i></font><font face="Calibri"><b>Revealed: how a little-known
pollution rule keeps the air dirty for millions of Americans</b><br>
Major investigation shows local governments are increasingly
exploiting a loophole in the Clean Air Act, leaving more than 21
million Americans with air that’s dirtier than they realize<br>
<br>
What you need to know about loophole hiding extent of US wildfire
pollution</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Molly Peterson, Dillon Bergin and Emily Zentner
with graphics by Andrew Witherspoon<br>
Mon 16 Oct 2023<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">A legal loophole has allowed the US
Environmental Protection Agency to strike pollution from clean air
tallies in more than 70 counties, enabling local regulators to
claim the air was cleaner than it really was for more than 21
million Americans.<br>
<br>
Regulators have exploited a little-known provision in the Clean
Air Act called the “exceptional events rule” to forgive pollution
caused by “natural” or “uncontrollable” events – including
wildfires – on records used by the EPA for regulatory decisions, a
new investigation from the California Newsroom, MuckRock and the
Guardian reveals.<br>
<br>
In addition to obscuring the true health risks of pollution and
swerving away from tighter control on local polluters, the rule
threatens the potency of the Clean Air Act, experts argue, at a
time when the climate crisis is posing an unprecedented challenge
to the health of millions of Americans.<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><b>More than 70 counties have successfully used
a little-known law to have pollution removed from EPA records<br>
</b></font><br>
<font face="Calibri">[See also
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://github.com/MuckRock/air-quality-exceptional-events">https://github.com/MuckRock/air-quality-exceptional-events</a> ]<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Where the EPA – the US agency monitoring air
quality – has agreed to exclude bad air days from analysis, “we
may have a sort of stable, relatively rosy picture when it comes
to our regulatory world in terms of air-quality trends,” said
Vijay Limaye, a climate and health epidemiologist at the Natural
Resources Defense Council (NRDC), a non-profit advocacy group.<br>
<br>
The truth is more complicated, and the air dirtier.<br>
<br>
“The true conditions on the ground in terms of the air that people
are breathing in, day after day, week after week, year after year,
is increasingly an unhealthy situation,” Limaye said.<br>
<br>
For the summer of 2023, more than 20 states so far, from Wyoming
to Wisconsin to North Carolina, have flagged air-quality readings
that were far higher than normal. Most of these days came in June,
as skies in the midwest and eastern US were blanketed with
Canadian wildfire smoke.<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">We pored over thousands of pages of regulatory
documentation, correspondence and contracts, and analyzed
hard-to-find public data to better understand how local regulators
make use of the exceptional events rule, as global heating sparks
extreme wildfires more often.<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">We found that, since 2016, when the EPA last
revised the guidance on exceptional events:<br>
<br>
</font><font face="Calibri">Local regulators in 21 states filed
requests with the agency to forgive pollution and, in 20 of those
states, had them approved.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">In total, local regulators made note of almost
700 exceptional events. The EPA agreed to adjust the data on 139
of them.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">The adjustments came in more than 70 counties
across 20 states. The affected areas stretched from the forested
Oregon coast to the Ohio rust belt, from the craggy Rhode Island
coastline down to the bayous of Louisiana.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">In more than half of the states where
exceptional events were forgiven, industry lobbyists and business
interests pressed to make that happen, sometimes as the only
public voice in the regulatory process. Also, to protect the
status quo, some regulators spent millions of taxpayer dollars
doing research for and making exceptional events requests,
sometimes working hand in hand with industry stakeholders.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Meeting air-quality standards matters a lot to
industry and politicians. Violations can add up to stricter, more
costly and potentially unpopular pollution controls.<br>
<br>
Critics say the growing use of the exceptional events rule for
wildfires is of deep concern. “You need to level with the public
about the number of days when the air quality was unhealthy,” said
Eric Schaeffer, a former regulator who directs the Environmental
Integrity Project.<br>
<br>
“We have saved more lives in this country because we cleaned up
the air than almost any other environmental policy,” said Michael
Wara, the director of the climate and energy policy program at
Stanford’s Woods Institute for the Environment. “And that’s what’s
being undermined.<br>
<br>
“The world has changed,” he said. “We are living in a different
world when it comes to wildfire and all of its consequences,
including air pollution.”<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">In response to written questions, the EPA said
it takes all air pollution seriously.<br>
<br>
“Wildland fire and smoke pose increasing challenges and human
health impacts in communities all around the country,” Khanya
Brann, an EPA spokesperson, wrote. “EPA works closely with other
federal agencies, state and local health departments, tribal
nations, and other partners to provide information, tools, and
resources to support communities in preparing for, responding to,
and reducing health impacts from wildland fire and smoke.”<br>
<br>
The EPA also pointed to “mitigation plans”, in which air districts
that have experienced repeated exceptional events must create
plans for educating and notifying the public about the pollution
risk, as well as “steps to identify, study, and implement
mitigating measures” like limiting the use of wood-burning stoves
and wetting down unpaved roads before dust storms.<br>
<b><br>
More ‘toxic soup’ and more paperwork</b><br>
In the US, clean-air policy long allowed local governments to
write off some wildfire smoke on a case-by-case-basis as
“unrealistic to control” or “impractical to fully control”. But in
2005, the Republican senator Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma, who has long
denied the climate crisis, won a years-long battle to amend the
Clean Air Act. The new rule gave local officials more opportunity
to exclude pollution from regulatory consideration for an array of
events, from fireworks displays and volcanic eruptions to
wildfires and even unusual traffic events.<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">At first, the rule was used most successfully
in a handful of south-western communities where high winds created
a recurring problem of dust pollution. Over time, local regulators
have turned to exceptional events for wildfires more and more
often to reach air-quality goals.<br>
<br>
Our analysis of local and EPA records found that in 2016, air
agencies flagged 19 wildfire events as potential exceptional
events. In 2018 and 2021, 52 and 50 wildfire events were flagged.
In 2020, 65 were.<br>
<br>
“The uptick in exceptional events is absolutely consistent with
what we see in the air pollution data,” said Marshall Burke, an
associate professor of global environmental policy at the Stanford
Doerr School of Sustainability. Smoke is accounting for a higher
proportion of overall air pollution, and it’s going up quickly,
Burke said – not just in the western US, but nationwide.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">No state is blamed more for smoke pollution
than California, followed by Oregon and Canadian provinces,
according to our analysis. Western states are more likely to point
fingers at each other, while states in the midwest and north-east
place the blame on Canadian provinces such as Alberta and
Saskatchewan.<br>
<br>
</font><font face="Calibri">Wildfire smoke is a dirty and
complicated polluter. Limaye, of the NRDC, called it a “toxic soup
of air pollution”. It carries soot and ash, regulated as
particulate pollution, as well as hydrocarbons and other gases
that, cooked in sunlight, help form ground-level ozone. It’s a
growing concern for public health, both near the source and
thousands of miles away. Smoke, especially from a long-burning
fire, can travel long distances and linger at dangerous levels for
weeks at a time.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">We analyzed data recorded at air monitors
nationwide. For every US county, on a day where the EPA excluded
any data, we counted that day. Our analysis found that the total
number of wildfire-related bad air days erased from regulatory
consideration in counties nationwide was nearly double that of bad
air days related to high winds: 236 compared with 121.</font><br>
- -<br>
<font face="Calibri">When wildfire caused air pollution, the rule
was applied to more monitor readings over multiple days, not just
to exclude particulate pollution but also smog or ozone.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">“It is a lot of time,” said John Walke, a
lawyer for the NRDC.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">One or two violations at a single air monitor
can flip an area from meeting air standards to missing the mark,
according to Walke. Three or four violations over several years
can prompt increasingly strict local pollution controls. “So a lot
is riding on one, or two, or three violations,” he said.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><br>
<b>A smokier future</b><br>
The recent experience of California’s Nevada county may offer a
glimpse of a smokier future. So far, the exceptional events rule
has removed 16 days from the record there in the last five years.<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/oct/16/epa-local-governments-dont-report-air-pollution-wildfire-smoke-data-across-us">https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/oct/16/epa-local-governments-dont-report-air-pollution-wildfire-smoke-data-across-us</a><br>
</font><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ Video - viewing a current collapse - an experiment - first
admit the problem ]</i><br>
<b>South Africa's Slow, Inevitable March Towards Collapse</b><br>
Wendover Productions<br>
944,716 views Oct 17, 2023<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iiny1GrfhYM">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iiny1GrfhYM</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<i>[ collapse lectures from the late Michael Dowd -- video ]</i><br>
<b>Our Inescapable Predicament</b><br>
Facing Future<br>
Jul 13, 2023 #ClimateChange #MichaelDowd<br>
We are grateful for Michael Dowd's many contributions to humanity,
and for this conversation. He was a force of nature, and his
passing on October 7, 2023 was a great loss. <br>
<br>
Industrial civilization has overshot the capacity of our planet to
sustain it, putting us in an inescapable predicament. #RupertRead,
#MichaelDowd and Dale Walkonen seek to answer the questions of how
we can face reality and still live full, useful lives, taking
compassionate and effective action, without doing more damage to our
planet. <br>
<br>
For more conversations with Michael Dowd:
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://postdoom.com/conversations/">https://postdoom.com/conversations/</a><br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=433oiO0Cw3I">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=433oiO0Cw3I</a>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ possible says Smithsonian magazine ]<br>
</i></font><font face="Calibri"><b>A Vital Ocean Current System
Could Collapse as Soon as 2025, Study Predicts</b><br>
Climate change could halt the Atlantic Meridional Overturning
Circulation sooner than thought, per a new paper, but some
scientists are skeptical<br>
Margaret Osborne<br>
Daily Correspondent<br>
July 27, 2023<br>
</font><font face="Calibri">- -<br>
</font><font face="Calibri">In the study, the team assumed that
global greenhouse gas emissions would continue to rise, as they
have been since the Industrial Revolution, per the New York Times’
Raymond Zhong. They based their analysis on sea surface
temperatures in a specific area of the North Atlantic from 1870 to
the present. These data suggested how strong the AMOC had been
during that time, since direct measurements of the system’s
strength began only 15 years ago. Yet, sea surface temperatures in
this area are “not a clear indicator of the state of the AMOC,”
Penny Holliday, head of marine physics and ocean circulation at
the National Oceanography Center in England, says in a statement.
“A collapse of the AMOC would profoundly impact every person on
Earth, but this study overstates the certainly in the likelihood
of it taking place within the next few years.”<br>
<br>
Still, Stefan Rahmstorf, a physicist and physical oceanographer at
the University of Potsdam in Germany, says the new paper adds to
existing evidence that the tipping point could be sooner than
previously thought. <br>
<br>
“As always in science, a single study provides limited evidence,
but when multiple approaches lead to similar conclusions, this
must be taken very seriously,” Rahmstorf says in a statement.
“Especially when we’re talking about a risk that we really want to
rule out with 99.9 percent certainty. The scientific evidence now
is that we can’t even rule out crossing a tipping point already in
the next decade or two.”<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/a-vital-ocean-current-system-could-collapse-as-soon-as-2025-study-predicts-180982605/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/a-vital-ocean-current-system-could-collapse-as-soon-as-2025-study-predicts-180982605/</a><br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ Activism AP report Great Greta ]</i><br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><b>Greta Thunberg was among climate
activists detained at a protest to disrupt oil executives’ forum<br>
</b></font><font face="Calibri">BY SYLVIA HUI<br>
Updated 10:39 AM PDT, October 17, 2023<br>
<br>
LONDON (AP) — Greta Thunberg was detained by British police on
Tuesday alongside other climate activists who gathered outside a
central London hotel to disrupt a major oil and gas industry
conference.<br>
<br>
Thunberg was among dozens of protesters who chanted “oily money
out” and sought to block access to the luxury InterContinental
Hotel on Park Lane, which is hosting the Energy Intelligence
Forum. The conference features speakers including the chief
executives of Shell, Saudi Arabia’s Aramco and Norway’s Equinor,
as well as the U.K.’s energy security minister.<br>
<br>
An Associated Press photographer saw officers speaking with
Thunberg before leading her away and taking her into a police
vehicle...</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">- -</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Protesters attempted to block access to the
conference venue by sitting on the sidewalk by the entrance. They
held aloft banners and chanted “oily money out” and “cancel the
conference,” while some lit yellow and pink smoke flares...</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Two Greenpeace activists abseiled down from the
roof of the hotel to unfurl a giant banner reading “Make Big Oil
Pay.”<br>
<br>
London’s Metropolitan Police said a total of 29 people were
arrested at Tuesday’s protests, including six on suspicion of
obstructing a highway and 21 others for breaching protest
conditions. One person was detained on suspicion of criminal
damage and a further for breaching court bail conditions. All were
in custody.<br>
<br>
Police said they engaged in conversations with the protesters on
allowing people to access the venue safely and prevent serious
disruption to the hotel and guests, but some of the activists
refused to move from the road.<br>
<br>
No charges have been issued yet.<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">’We were linking arms when the police forced
their way in and singled out Greta. She was dragged down the
street at speed to a police van where they refused to say where
she was being taken,” said Joanna Warrington, an organizer with
Fossil Free London who was at the demonstration.<br>
<br>
The protesters accuse fossil fuel companies of deliberately
slowing the global energy transition to renewables in order to
make more profit.<br>
<br>
They also oppose the British government’s recent approval of
drilling for oil in the North Sea, off the Scottish coast. U.K.
authorities have defended the move, saying it is necessary for the
country’s energy security.<br>
<br>
“The world is drowning in fossil fuels. Our hopes and dreams and
lives are being washed away by a flood of greenwashing and lies,”
Thunberg told reporters before she was detained. “It has been
clear for decades that the fossil fuel industries were well aware
of the consequences of their business models, and yet they have
done nothing.”<br>
<br>
“We cannot let this continue. The elite of the oil and money
conference, they have no intention of transition,” she added. “We
have no other option but to put our bodies outside this conference
and to physically disrupt. And we have to do that every time, we
have to continue showing them that they are not going to get away
with this.”...</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">- -</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">Environmental groups say they will continue to
protest throughout the planned forum, which is expected to last
three days.<br>
<br>
Thunberg inspired a global youth movement demanding stronger
efforts to fight climate change after staging weekly protests
outside the Swedish Parliament starting in 2018. She was recently
fined by a Swedish court for disobeying police during an
environmental protest in Sweden.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://apnews.com/article/uk-climate-protest-greta-thunberg-b6eaf08ceb08075d2a51121a448735e1">https://apnews.com/article/uk-climate-protest-greta-thunberg-b6eaf08ceb08075d2a51121a448735e1</a></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://apnews.com/article/uk-climate-protest-greta-thunberg-b6eaf08ceb08075d2a51121a448735e1?utm_campaign=Hot%20News&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=278828768&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--1NU-7w4aQ3Je4QxsZxq66gbQ_gHjOKgEvzNyvFmt3C2YTabT8zotcmu5DbwZH5ZQrP9s6Ut5cAvJ-H4eGb66fA-XxEw&utm_content=278828768&utm_source=hs_email">https://apnews.com/article/uk-climate-protest-greta-thunberg-b6eaf08ceb08075d2a51121a448735e1?utm_campaign=Hot%20News&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=278828768&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--1NU-7w4aQ3Je4QxsZxq66gbQ_gHjOKgEvzNyvFmt3C2YTabT8zotcmu5DbwZH5ZQrP9s6Ut5cAvJ-H4eGb66fA-XxEw&utm_content=278828768&utm_source=hs_email</a><br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ See also the sudden warming during the
Younger-Dryas some 28,000 years ago ]</i></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><i> </i> </font> <font face="Calibri"><b>Dr
Euan Nisbet - Methane Climate Termination Event - Wetlands are
turning on (summary version)</b></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> Nick Breeze ClimateGenn</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> Oct 17, 2023 ClimateGenn #podcast produced
by Nick Breeze</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> Episode contents: </font><br>
<blockquote><font face="Calibri">1. Comparisons between methane and
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">2. Working out the methane budget.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">3. Atmosphere getting richer in Carbon 13
isotope from fossil fuel industry.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">4. Something happened in 2006 as Carbon 12
started to rise.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">5. Rising methane from biological sources.6.
Regional increases are spiking.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">7. Different types of biological sources.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">8. Feedbacks switching on</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">.9. Wetlands are “turning on”.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">10. Historic precedent: “huge rapid change”</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">11. Events known as a “Terminations”</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">12. A rapidly changing planet.</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">13. Should we use geoengineering?</font><br>
</blockquote>
<font face="Calibri"> </font><font face="Calibri"><a
class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDwxFS0KeQY">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDwxFS0KeQY</a></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> </font><br>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ video discussion on heat trauma and other
destabilizations ]</i></font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><b>Living on Borrowed Time</b></font><br>
<font face="Calibri">GBH Forum Network</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"> Sep 11, 2023 CAMBRIDGE</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">“And as the summer unfolded, it became evident
that it’s not just smoke, and not just Canada. This has been the
summer from climate hell all across the Earth, when it ceased
being possible to escape or deny what we have done to our planet
and ourselves” says Professor Michael Flannigan, of Thompson
Rivers University in Kamloops, British Columbia, who has been
studying the interaction of fire and climate for over 35 years.
“Temperatures are rising at the rate we thought they would, but
the effects are more severe, more frequent, more critical. It’s
crazy and getting crazier.” NYT August 23, ’23</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">In this program, Cambridge Forum talks to Jeff
Goodell, NY bestselling author and contributing editor at Rolling
Stone; and Dr. Mike Flannigan, Research Chair for Predictive
Services, Emergency Management and Fire Science at Thompson Rivers
University and the Scientific Director of the Canadian Partnership
for Wildland Fire Science.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Goodell has covered climate change for more
than two decades for Rolling Stone. His latest book, “The Heat
will Kill You First” presents a searing examination of the impact
that rising temperatures will have on our lives and on our planet.</font><br>
<br>
<font face="Calibri">Dr. Flannigan has been studying fire and
weather/climate interactions including the potential impact of
climatic change and lightning-ignited forest fires for over 40
years.</font><br>
<blockquote><font face="Calibri">0:00:00 - Introduction</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">0:00:33 - Welcoming Remarks</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">0:03:17 - Jeff Goodell Interview</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">0:17:07 - Michael Flannigan Interview</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">0:29:25 - Group Discussion and Q&A</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">0:56:59 - Closing Remarks</font><br>
</blockquote>
<font face="Calibri">GBH Forum Network ~ Free online lectures:
Explore a world of ideas</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29qEGs0xxAY">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=29qEGs0xxAY</a></font><br>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"> <i>[The news archive - looking back at an
unusual time ]</i><br>
<font size="+2"><i><b>October 19, 1992</b></i></font> <br>
October 19, 1992: In the third presidential debate, President
George H. W. Bush accuses Democratic challenger Bill Clinton and
his running mate, Senator Al Gore, of pandering to "the spotted
owl crowd or the extremes in the environmental movement" by
supporting an increase in fuel efficiency standards. Clinton
defends the idea of raising fuel efficiency standards; in
addition, he states, "We also ought to convert more vehicles to
compressed natural gas. That's another way to improve the
environment." <br>
<br>
(26:30-29:00)<br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCGtHqIwKek">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCGtHqIwKek</a><br>
<br>
<br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri"> <br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><br>
=== Other climate news sources
===========================================<br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><b>*Inside Climate News</b><br>
Newsletters<br>
We deliver climate news to your inbox like nobody else. Every
day or once a week, our original stories and digest of the web’s
top headlines deliver the full story, for free.<br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://insideclimatenews.org/">https://insideclimatenews.org/</a><br>
--------------------------------------- <br>
*<b>Climate Nexus</b> <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://climatenexus.org/hot-news/*">https://climatenexus.org/hot-news/*</a>
<br>
Delivered straight to your inbox every morning, Hot News
summarizes the most important climate and energy news of the
day, delivering an unmatched aggregation of timely, relevant
reporting. It also provides original reporting and commentary on
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remain largely unexposed. 5 weekday <br>
================================= <br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><b class="moz-txt-star"><span
class="moz-txt-tag">*</span>Carbon Brief Daily </b><span
class="moz-txt-star"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.carbonbrief.org/newsletter-sign-up">https://www.carbonbrief.org/newsletter-sign-up</a></span><b
class="moz-txt-star"><span class="moz-txt-tag">*</span></b> <br>
Every weekday morning, in time for your morning coffee, Carbon
Brief sends out a free email known as the “Daily Briefing” to
thousands of subscribers around the world. The email is a digest
of the past 24 hours of media coverage related to climate change
and energy, as well as our pick of the key studies published in
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