We see climate change everywhere — in stronger storms, drier droughts and more acidic oceans. We also see solutions everywhere — in the way we make electricity, fertilize crops or move cargo.
With sophisticated scientific tools and a deep knowledge of what makes the economy work, we’re building lasting ways to stabilize the climate and protect communities hit the hardest.
Our work
With a wide range of partners, we target sources of climate pollution around the world by pinpointing the biggest opportunities for change.
- Overview
Defending limits on climate pollution from cars and light trucks
- Solutions
Why China is at the center of our climate strategy
- Initiative
The EPA is gutting rules that protect you from methane pollution
- Solutions
Solving climate change takes a global effort
- Background
Deforestation: Solved via carbon markets?
- Blog post
Carbon removal technologies to help tackle climate change? Here’s what it’ll take.
Resources
- Explainer
Why our changing climate needs a 100% clean economy
- Blog
Climate 411: Expert commentary on global climate change and clean air
- Blog
Energy Exchange: Expert commentary on shifting to a clean energy economy
- Explainer
How climate change plunders the planet
- Analysis
This is why fighting climate change is so urgent
- Explainer
Extreme weather gets a boost from climate change
- Explainer
Natural gas: 5 areas of concern
- Report
Clean energy is building a new American workforce
- Article
9 ways we know humans triggered climate change
Our experts
We bring together people with diverse skills to tackle climate change. Here are some who represent key parts of this work.
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Nathaniel Keohane
Senior Vice President, Climate
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Susanne Brooks
Senior Director, U.S. Climate Policy & Analysis
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Tomás Carbonell
Senior Counsel and Director for Regulatory Policy
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Kritee Kritee
Senior Scientist
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Annie Petsonk
International Counsel
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Jianyu Zhang
Founder, Chief Representative and Vice President, EDF China Program
Staff perspective
We’re using sophisticated tools to see the effects of climate pollution over the short and long term, to build that larger case that time matters.
Ilissa Ocko
Senior Climate Scientist
Media contact
Keith Gaby
(202) 572-3336 (office)