Energy Blown in the U.S.A.

Bruce Springsteen, if you’re reading this, it’s my formal request to make you a wind energy spokesperson.

Welcome back to our weekly newsletter, Pique Behind the Curtain. If you’ve come in search of climate content, new film features, and all-around positive vibes, then you’ve come to the right place.

If you've ever thought about divesting from dirty #fossilfuels, NOW is the time! Join Carbon Collective for Green Retirement Month: https://www.carboncollective.co/green-retirement-month

But First…We’re Hiring!

Come join us! And not in the metaphorical sense. If you have experience growing audiences on social media, we want you to be a part of Pique.

We're hiring a Director of Social & Audience growth. Whether you've always been passionate about saving the planet or are just now considering making the switch to #workinclimate, come join us! (Not for you but know someone perfect for the job? Feel free to pass along our invitation.)

Check out this latest and greatest earth-saving opportunity here.

We're also looking for an Editor and News Curator! This person will be responsible for editing and reviewing our two newsletters, Pique Behind the Curtain and Pathfinder: Uplifting Climate Stories by Alaina Wood.

Are you an excellent writer, passionate about changing the conversation around climate change, and plugged into the news? Apply here.

Statiq

India is home to six of the world’s ten most polluted cities - and vehicular pollution accounts for 40% of it.

To solve the pollution problem in India, you have to cut transportation emissions. EVs are one obvious solution. The problem is that India is much more densely populated than countries throughout Europe or the United States where people can charge vehicles at home in their garages. 80% of electric vehicle in India relies on public infrastructure - and that infrastructure does not yet exist to standard.

That’s where Statiq comes in. This company builds affordable, reliable, and accessible EV charging stations to help speed up the transition to clean transportation.

Have we Piqued your interest? Check back next week for the full film!

Is Carbon-Neutral B.S.?

Last week, we talked a bit about greenwashing and how you can avoid falling prey to a non-green, clever marketing skeem. Today, we’re going to talk about one of those marketing buzzwords: carbon-neutral.

Carbon neutral is a term used to describe a business that has calculated its annual greenhouse gas emissions and offset or balanced its impact on the climate by investing in ventures designed to save an equal amount of GHGs somewhere else.

This is generally a good thing. The carbon credit market is up 164% since 2020. Which is… a lot. And it signals investment trends are going green.

The biggest complaint with the concept of carbon-neutral is that it allows businesses to continue polluting under the guise of being green. Which is… kind of true. A company can use an emissions-spewing factory that causes all kinds of health and environmental risks for local communities, pay someone to plant some trees, and put a shiny “carbon-neutral” label on their product. (Okay, it’s not that simple. But you get it.)

It’s possible that if a company is clear and upfront about how they’re carbon-neutral and it’s within reasonable limits that they’ve done it the right way. And that is a good thing for the planet. Some technology to reach net-zero emissions simply does not exist yet, and those companies using carbon credits are doing the best they can.

According to the targets set by the Paris Climate Agreement, we have 29 more years to reach global net-zero emissions. And even though natural carbon sinks have the bad*ss capability of removing between 9.5 and 11 gigatons of CO2 per year, that’s not enough to fight climate change alone.

So, what does that mean? The explosion of the carbon credit market tells us something incredibly important: consumers are demanding better from businesses. Let’s be honest - carbon-neutral is a step in the right direction, but the real progress will come when companies invest in cleaner production processes and reach net-zero (meaning they produce no carbon themselves, rather than producing it and paying someone else to offset it).

As consumers smarten up to greenwashing tactics and learn that demanding decarbonization is the only path to clean, ethical business, companies will have no choice but to follow suit.

I have my megaphone ready for the next rally. Do you?

Check out our video on the carbon-neutral debate here.

Good Climate News!

Paying to Protect Planet Earth

Now THIS is good news. This is the news for all the “put your money where your mouth is” folk (and I am said folk).

Global investment in renewable energy has increased by 11% in the first half of this year compared to the same time period in 2021. That increase brings total green energy investment spend to $226 billion, setting a new record.

Lots of that dough went toward solar, a total of $120 billion and up 33% from last year, and wind projects, at $84 billion and up 16%. These are massive jumps that will have equally massive impacts on emissions reductions. Renewables provide reliable power supplies and fuel diversification which not only reduces pollution risks like fuel spills and toxic emission output, but also reduced the nation’s reliance on imported fuel.

The United States can do better on many, many, many things. So many things. And now I kind of want to list them… but you came here for opposite of doomscrolling so, nevermind.

One area where we do lead, however, is in renewable energy venture capital and private equity investment. Global funding in renewables in H1 was $9.6 billion - and the United States contributed approximately half of that at $4.8 billion.

These investments are a crucial part of the growth and scalability of clean energy, especially in regards to meeting the standards set by The Paris Agreement. Which, by the way, seems a lot more attainable after the recent passing of the Inflation Reduction Act. If you’re like me and you go through periods of living under a rock, fear not. I summarized it for you last week.

Fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas are undoubtedly the largest contributors to to global climate change, responsible for over 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions and almost 90% of all carbon dioxide emissions. The science is quite clear. To avoid the biggest and baddest effects of climate change, we need to cut emissions in half by 2030 and reach net-zero by 2050.

The good (actually, great) news is - that’s possible. It’s more than possible… it’s happening. Albeit, slowly - but economic trends like one are an incredibly promising sign. I’ve closed newsletters like this before, and I’ll do it again: money talks. So, let’s keep it talking climate.

What We’re Watching, Reading, and Listening to

Searching for more positive and informative climate content? Look no further!

Supported By: Carbon Collective

If you've ever thought about divesting from dirty #fossilfuels, now is the time! Join Carbon Collective for Green Retirement Month: They'll send you up to $25 for every $10k you transfer: https://www.carboncollective.co/green-retirement-month

Written by Shayna Berglas