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Blog
January is a great time to start fresh. Whether it’s signing up for a new gym membership or cutting back on social media, the New Year is an opportunity to envision a better future and eliminate bad habits. And the Northeast has one that can’t be ignored for another year: an ongoing, dangerous reliance on fossil fuels.
The Northeast’s New Year’s Resolution: Get Serious About Climate Change
Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza had powerful words about the role equity must play in climate work when the city released its Climate Justice Plan in late October. “Despite being one of the three pillars of sustainability, equity is often an afterthought when it comes to climate action planning,” Elorza wrote in the plan’s introduction.
Climate Justice for Providence
Newsletter
Last month, young people around the world marched to demand action from decision makers. They echoed what thousands of the world’s climate scientists have concluded: only a short period of time remains — 10 years, from now until 2030 — for the world to reduce climate pollution by at least 45% from 2010 levels and shift to clean energy systems so the globe can avoid the worst impacts of a warming planet
Make the Next Decade Count
Solutions for a clean energy future are here, and so is Acadia Center’s Clean Heating Pathways. The report outlines the potential for clean heating in the Northeast and how electric heating technologies can help make our homes and businesses more comfortable and safe while propelling states toward their climate goals. Clean Heating Pathways shows that Northeastern states are beginning to support heat pump adoption in alignment with state policy objectives, but not nearly fast enough.