CATF Resources
Viewing page 50 of 69
-
The Last Climate Frontier: Leveraging the Arctic Council to make Progress on Black Carbon and Methane
Impacts from climate change are threatening the Arctic environment and way of life.
-
Corn Butanol: Economics and Performance of Gevo’s Technology
Butanol made from corn starch poses many of the same climate threats associated with corn ethanol.
-
Nationwide Standards for Methane Emissions from Oil and Gas Are Key to Controlling Ozone
-
Bakken Flaring in Focus: A Close Look at Natural Gas Flaring in North Dakota
-
Quantifying Cost-Effectiveness of Systematic Leak Detection and Repair Programs Using Infrared Cameras.
-
Fixing the Leaks: What Would it Cost to Clean Up Natural Gas Leaks?
Methane is a potent climate pollutant: it is the second most important greenhouse gas behind CO2 and, pound-for-pound, it is dozens of times more potent than CO2.
-
Quantifying Cost-effectiveness of Systematic Leak Detection and Repair Program Using Infrared Cameras
About 30% of the US anthropogenic methane emissions originate from the oil and natural gas sector. Emissions are partly leaks and partly engineered vents.
-
Power Switch: An Effective, Affordable Approach to Reducing Carbon Pollution from Existing Fossil-Fueled Power Plants
CATF’s study, Power Switch, proposes a common sense, highly cost-effective approach under Clean Air Act Section 111(d) for reducing carbon pollution from existing power plants.