JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) The federal government announced plans Friday to “repeal or replace” a decision by the Trump administration last fall to lift restrictions on logging and road building in a southeast Alaska rainforest that provides habitat for wolves, bears and salmon. Conservationists cheered the announcement as a positive step. But Republican Alaska Gov. […]
JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) The federal government announced plans Friday to “repeal or replace” a decision by the Trump administration last fall to lift restrictions on logging and road building in a southeast Alaska rainforest that provides habitat for wolves, bears and salmon.
[Episcopal News Service] Earlier this week thousands of people, including Episcopalians from as far as Oregon and Washington, D.C., answered an invitation from
The Wall Street Journal editorial board argued President Biden's energy policy to lead the U.S. in a retreat from fossil fuels would ultimately be a gift to adversaries Russia and China.
Ms. Fonda said Mr. Biden had done “many, many good things” to address climate change, including revoking the permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline project and stopping oil and gas drilling in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. But she said he hasn’t been radical enough.
“Look at the big picture, we are barreling toward a true catastrophe, an existential catastrophe, which is the climate crisis,” she said.
“We’re very, very grateful for what he‘s been doing,” she said, referring to Mr. Biden as a “moderate.” “He‘s done a lot of very good things. But not enough. Not bold enough and not fast enough.