Sentences with phrase «energy wonks»

As energy wonks across the country gear up for the release of the Energy Information Administration's (EIA) International Energy Outlook (IEO), we here at Oil Change International wanted to be sure everyone is on the same page as we read over the EIA's analysis.
So do numerous energy wonks, including two researchers who penned a 2009 cover story in Scientific American asserting that «wind, water, and solar technologies can provide 100 percent of the world's energy» by 2030.
Energy wonks and practitioners have also offered a variety of arguments in support of the mandate.
On our Grist 50, you'll find scientists, policymakers, artists, farmers, social justice advocates, entrepreneurs, technologists, chefs, clean - energy wonks — all kinds of people who can help bail us out of our current climate code red.
Where climate scientists, energy wonks, academics, and eco-journalists go wrong is in abstracting climate change from the larger political situation.
Energy wonks will gather in New York City on April 3 for the third annual Sustainable Energy for All (SE4All) forum to discuss progress on SDG7, whose aim is «By 2030, [to] ensure universal access to affordable, reliable and modern energy services.»
While most policy discussions around climate change focus on energy wonks, the Times says that military analysts are increasingly of the view that «climate - induced crises could topple governments, feed terrorist movements or destabilize entire regions».
New York League of Conservation Voters has a helpful explanation of how it works and what it might look like — even if you aren't an energy wonk, it's a pretty interesting read.
-LSB-...] to Julian Wong, China energy wonk and genius behind Green Leap Forward.

Not exact matches

I often dip into EIA data, so I could sympathize with American energy analysts and policy wonks bemoaning the situation.
One of the many aspects of state energy law understood almost exclusively by policy wonks, energy performance contracts allow municipalities to enter into long - term agreements — running up to 35 years — for projects specifically designed to reduce energy consumption and costs.
Back to policy wonk speak — this poor configuration affects outcomes as precious time and energy is spent running sub-optimal parallel systems.
I'm an energy and climate wonk.
Visit the foundation's Weekly Wonk blog for answers from Sharon E. Burke, an international and energy security analyst, Steve LeVine of Quartz, Daniel Sarewitz, professor of science and society at Arizona State University, and Russell Gold, senior energy reporter at the Wall Street Journal and author of «The Boom: How Fracking Ignited the American Energy Revolution and Changed the World.&energy security analyst, Steve LeVine of Quartz, Daniel Sarewitz, professor of science and society at Arizona State University, and Russell Gold, senior energy reporter at the Wall Street Journal and author of «The Boom: How Fracking Ignited the American Energy Revolution and Changed the World.&energy reporter at the Wall Street Journal and author of «The Boom: How Fracking Ignited the American Energy Revolution and Changed the World.&Energy Revolution and Changed the World.»
This was originally recited to me as kind of an energy - wonk joke.
Last week on National Journal's Energy Experts Blog, 16 wonks addressed the question: «Is Washington Ready for a Carbon Tax?»
Many clean tech wonks have never heard of them, but Alevo plans to be manufacturing grid - scale energy storage on a huge scale within the next few years.
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