
Forget symbolic acts and solar panels. Bill McKibben wants to shame political leaders by showing them what real work on climate change looks like.

Our good friends at 350.org just announced the plan for their next big global day of climate action. Get the details here.

There's the 350.org Work Party, the Re:Form School art show, Los Angeles's car-free street party, and screenings of a classic design film.
On second thought, McKibben's "Put Solar On It" road trip stunt was productive.
Learn exactly how the U.S. Chamber of Commerce--not the mom and pop shops in your local organization--have mounted a decades-long assault on our air.

CoFed creates sustainable, student-run cafes & food stores at college campuses as an alternative to the typical fast food options offered.

This past weekend, 10,000 climate activists gathered in Washington, D.C. But CNN, Fox News, and The Washington Post apparently didn't notice.

Looking back on 7,347 actions in 188 countries on 10/10/10.
In a Q&A at Scientific American, Bill McKibben, the founder of 350.org, suggests we need a new word to define human progress: Q: If "growth"...

The film The Economics of Happiness investigates why fewer Americans say they're happy than in decades past and whether localizing can help.
It's not every day that a friend and mentor is interviewed on Letterman. Nor is it every day that any climate change expert or advocate is...

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is a front for the biggest corporations and polluters. Small businesses are saying "the chamber doesn't speak for me."

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce doesn't really care about small business. It just wants its wealthiest backers to pollute forever.

Find the 1,000 businesses, large and small, who have distanced themselves from the U.S. Chamber's draconian stance on climate change.

What are you doing on Sunday? Hopefully celebrating climate solutions as part of the massive 10/10/10 Global Work Party.

Learn how the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is nothing but a front group for big polluters in under 30 seconds.

The post-earthquake debate about nuclear reactors, massive new coal mining, and more of what we're reading at GOOD Environment HQ.