Resource Type
Reports & Papers
Viewing page 15 of 24
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CPP Rate Merger
EPA must retain the requirement that rate-based states seeking to engage in interstate trading merge their target emission rates.
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Regulation Works
A look at how science, advocacy and good regulations combined to reduce power plant pollution and public health impacts; with a focus on states in the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative
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Waste Not: Common Sense Ways to Reduce Methane Pollution from the Oil and Natural Gas Industry
Waste Not, a new report from leading climate advocates shows how the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) can cut climate warming methane pollution in half, while dramatically reducing harmful, wasteful air pollution from the oil and gas industry at the same time, by issuing federal standards for methane pollution based on available, low-cost technologies and practices.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Alternative Approaches for Regulating Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Existing Power Plants under the Clean Air Act
During the fall of 2013, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) began stakeholder engagement and regulatory processes to develop a proposed rule to regulate greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) from existing fossil fuel-fired power plants under Section 111(d) of the Clean Air Act (CAA).