In the News

January 31, 2022

Biggest Bitcoin Miners Pressed by Congress on Climate Impact

by Josh Saul

A group of Democratic lawmakers led by U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren is demanding details from six of the world's biggest Bitcoin miners about their electricity consumption and greenhouse-gas emissions, a warning shot that comes amid growing concern over the cryptocurrency industry's environmental impact. The eight lawmakers sent letters Thursday asking miners including Marathon Digital Holdings Inc. and Riot Blockchain Inc., to provide their facilities' annual electricity consumption, growth …  Continue Reading


January 27, 2022

Democrats press cryptomining companies on energy consumption

by Zack Budryk

Eight Democratic members of Congress on Thursday wrote to major cryptocurrency-mining companies for information on their energy usage and its potential effects on climate change. The House and Senate members noted that estimates of the power consumption associated with bitcoin increased more than threefold between 2019 and 2021. The energy consumption is roughly equivalent to that of Washington state or the entire nation of Denmark, according to a September 2021 analysis by The New York …  Continue Reading


January 26, 2022

House Dems seek to protect declining salmon populations

by Rob Hotakainen

NOAA and the Fish and Wildlife Service would be required to identify the nation's "core centers of salmon abundance" and do more to restore and protect the habitats of the fish under a $90 million bill introduced by a key House Democrat yesterday. Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.), who oversees fisheries issues as chair of the House Natural Resources Subcommittee on Water, Oceans and Wildlife, said his bill - H.R. 6491, the "Salmon Focused Investments in Sustainable Habitats (FISH) Act" - would …  Continue Reading


January 26, 2022

HSU no more: it’s Cal Poly Humboldt now

January 26, 2022 (LONG BEACH, CA)- Today, the California State University (CSU) Board of Trustees approved a new designation and name for Humboldt State University-California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt. This caps nearly two years of planning by the Hispanic-Serving Institution for new curricula and facilities, increased hands-on student research opportunities, and the expected enrollment growth associated with the enhanced offerings and new designation. As of today, the …  Continue Reading


January 26, 2022

Progressives introduce climate resilience bill

by Nick Sobczyk

House Democrats are pushing new legislation to develop a workforce for climate resilience projects, with a focus on broader progressive concerns about equity and environmental justice. The "Climate Resilience Workforce Act" would create several new grant programs for states and communities to plan against climate impacts - such as sea-level rise and more severe extreme weather - and secure workers for the projects. Introduced yesterday by Progressive Caucus Chair Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), …  Continue Reading


January 26, 2022

Jared Huffman introduces legislation to preserve salmon strongholds

by Isabella Vanderheiden

North Coast Rep. Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael) reintroduced legislation Tuesday to identify, restore, and protect thriving salmon populations and critical habitat strongholds. Habitat degradation, pollution, climate change, dams, and overharvesting have caused salmon populations to decline throughout the North Coast and across the nation. The Salmon Focused Investments in Sustainable Habitats, or FISH Act would ensure the survival of the healthiest remaining salmon populations …  Continue Reading


January 25, 2022

Huffman cites salmon’s economic, ecological importance in move to protect habitat

by Guy Kovner

Citing the economic, ecological and cultural importance of salmon, North Coast Rep. Jared Huffman is once again trying to identify, restore and protect the nation's most outstanding salmon rivers and watersheds. The Salmon FISH Act, which the San Rafael Democrat reintroduced Tuesday, would require federal agencies to identify critical areas of abundance and productivity of six species of salmon and steelhead trout and authorize funding for their conservation. Huffman, who chairs the House …  Continue Reading


January 22, 2022

Huffman joins effort to help fire victims with the IRS

by K.C. Meadows

Washington, D.C. - Congressman Jared Huffman (D-San Rafael) has joined colleagues in the House and Senate in signing a letter to Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Charles Rettig to expedite and release tax guidance to help wildfire victims understand the taxability of their claims from the Fire Victim Trust. The Trust, a $13.5 billion settlement established in July 2020, is made up of over 70,000 survivors of the 2015 Butte Fire, the 2017 North Bay Wildfires, and the 2018 Camp …  Continue Reading


January 20, 2022

A Slimmed-Down Biden Plan With Climate Focus Divides Progressives

by Ari Natter

Progressives are divided over President Joe Biden's willingness to break off $550 billion in climate spending from his moribund Build Back Better plan as separate legislation, despite the popularity of the provisions. Biden cracked the door open to breaking up his signature spending bill as a means of overcoming objections to the broader measure from Democratic Senators Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, pivotal votes in the evenly divided chamber. "I think we can …  Continue Reading


January 19, 2022

$14 Billion Wildlife Conservation Plan Advanced by House Panel

by Kellie Lunneye

The House Natural Resources Committee approved a wildlife conservation bill Wednesday that would establish $14 billion in funds for conservation projects for species recovery and wildlife habitat. The "Recovering America's Wildlife Act," approved by a bipartisan vote of 29-15, would provide dedicated, annual funding of $1.4 billion over the next decade for states, tribes, and territories to work on wildlife conservation projects. Republicans Rob Wittman (Va.), Don Young (Alaska), Jenniffer …  Continue Reading


January 18, 2022

House Dems aim for a trimmed BBB

by Matthew Choi


January 18, 2022

House panel mulls animal trap ban, albatross protections

by Michael Doyle


January 08, 2022

Potter Valley hydropower project license lapse sets stage for plans to remove Eel River dam

by Guy Kovner

The future of a little-known dam on the Eel River in Lake County may be shaped this year as the license expires on a broken-down PG&E hydropower project that plays a critical role in providing water to 600,000 Sonoma and Marin county residents. Demolition of Scott Dam, a 138-foot concrete structure built a century ago to impound Lake Pillsbury, is an "absolute requirement" for a coalition that includes Sonoma, Mendocino and Humboldt counties interested in picking up the license, said Rep. …  Continue Reading


January 05, 2022

North Bay lawmakers reflect on state of democracy on the anniversary of deadly riot at US Capitol

by Andrew Graham

Rep. Mike Thompson is a combat veteran who was seriously wounded in the Vietnam War. Representing the North Bay and North Coast, he has served nine terms as a congressman - governing across nearly two decades of tumultuous American history. But taking stock of all that experience, back to his days as an Army paratrooper, it was the long, gut-twisting hours of one shocking, bloody day a year ago that Thompson said marks "probably the most troubling time in my lifetime." On Jan. 6, 2021, …  Continue Reading


January 04, 2022

Overnight Energy & Environment — Manchin raises hopes on climate spending

by Rachel Franzin

Welcome to Tuesday's Overnight Energy & Environment, your source for the latest news focused on energy, the environment and beyond. Subscribe here: thehill.com/newsletter-signup. Today we're looking at Manchin's latest comments on the Democrats' climate and social spending bill, Democrats signaling they're open to changes to get the bill across the finish line and a new study indicating that the Northeast could see more hurricanes. For The Hill, we're Rachel Frazin and Zack Budryk. …  Continue Reading


December 24, 2021

A closer look at the $25 million Eel River Canyon preserve set to become California’s newest wildland park

by Guy

COVELO - The Grand Canyon of the Eel River, a vast, seldom-seen wildland, unfolds before a visitor's eyes from a knoll at 3,200 feet, the silvery waterway snaking north through the Coast Ranges of Mendocino and Trinity County as a red-tailed hawk glides effortlessly below. Teeming with wildlife - including elusive Roosevelt elk, bears, bobcats, feral pigs, bald eagles and mountain lions - it is a realm few Californians have seen or even know about. It is also a treasure to conservationists, …  Continue Reading


December 23, 2021

Dems on 2022: ‘We’re Toast’ if Build Back Better Is Dead

by Ursula Perano

Inflation is at record highs. Roe v. Wade is in limbo. Voting rights are under attack. The filibuster is intact. Student debt isn't canceled. Climate change is unaddressed. And the Build Back Better Act-the cornerstone of President Joe Biden's agenda-looks doomed. And now, despite those failures, Democrats have to sell their unified control of Washington as a success. Democrats have certainly achieved some policy wins this year. They passed a bipartisan infrastructure deal, providing $1 …  Continue Reading


December 22, 2021

Billions of dollars coming for broadband upgrades, seeking to close digital divide for North Coast residents

by Guy Kovner

A 200-foot tower recently installed at a remote tribal rancheria in the northwest corner of Sonoma County brought broadband service to about 70 residents who saw an immediate difference in their lives. Their children can now do their homework and adults can search for jobs online. A federal grant paid for the $471,000 tower that reaches over the treetops to pick up a broadband signal from Annapolis that can also carry wildfire and other emergency alerts, as well as downloading music and video …  Continue Reading


December 21, 2021

Hill climate hawks plot next steps after bill’s collapse

by Nick Sobczyk

Democrats are hoping to revive their climate and social spending bill after Sen. Joe Manchin rejected it over the weekend, but hot tempers and uncertain politics have left legislation key to President Biden's climate goals hanging in the balance. The West Virginia Democrat, who chairs the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, blindsided his party by announcing his wholesale rejection of the $1.7 trillion "Build Back Better Act" over the weekend, leaving Democrats in a tricky situation that …  Continue Reading


December 20, 2021

Manchin said no. Now what?

by Matthew Choi

NOT THROWING IN THE TOWEL YET: Despite the blow to morale, backers of the climate portions of BBB aren't calling it game over. Activists and lawmakers who worked directly with Manchin and his staff said the West Virginian had appeared receptive to the clean energy portions of the bill during their talks. Leah Stokes, a UC Santa Barbara professor who worked with Democrats on climate provisions of the reconciliation package, pointed to Manchin's posturing ahead of the Covid rescue package early …  Continue Reading

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