Can Biden Expand Gas And Zero Out Emisions?

EI’s Jeff Rissman explains that a new agreement between the U.S. and the European Union to deliver liquified natural gas contains much ambiguity when it comes to impacts on global greenhouse gas emissions.

U.S., Europe Seek Path To Cut Russian Fuel, Help Climate

EI’s Mike O’Boyle explains that now is the ideal time to transition to clean energy sources rather than increasing our dependence of foreign fossil fuels.

EPA Eyes New Rule For Gas-Fired Power Plants

EI’s Mike O’Boyle explains why hydrogen isn’t a silver-bullet solution for carbon-free electricity.

Coal’s Comeback Is Greatly Exaggerated

EI’s Silvio Marcacci explains why increased coal output in 2021 is an outlier rather than a reversal of the fuel’s steep decline.

‘Defining Moment’: How Can The U.S. End Its Dependency On Fossil Fuels?

EI’s Robbie Orvis explains support for wind, solar and electric cars would cut U.S. oil demand enough to offset Russian imports.

3 Ways The U.S. Can Replace Its Russian Oil Imports At The Pump

EI analysis finds tax credits proposed in the Build Back Better Act would reduce oil demand enough to replace half of Russian imports by 2025, and entirely eclipse Russian oil imports by 2027.

As War Rages, A Struggle To Balance Energy Crunch And Climate Crisis

EI analysis finds the Build Back Better Act’s electric vehicle provisions could cut U.S. oil consumption by 180 million barrels per year by 2030, more than double what the nation imported from Russia last year.

What The Bans On Russian Fossil Fuels Actually Mean

EI’s Robbie Orvis explains the only way to protect U.S. consumers from future fossil fuel volatility is to reduce demand, not increase the supply of domestic oil.

Biden’s Climate Change Agenda Would Reduce Oil Demand Enough To Replace Russian Imports: Study

EI’s Robbie Orvis explains the only robust, long-term way to be energy secure is to eliminate demand for fossil fuels.

Biden Taps Head Of The EPA’s Air Office. Expect A Tough Confirmation Fight

EI’s Robbie Orvis explains the best way to bridge the shortfall resulting from the ban on Russian oil is to decrease demand, not increase supply.