
Tearing our turf in Vail
After creating parks with grass, Vail landscape architect is now methodically removing it, a nod to growing water scarcity in the Colorado River Basin.

After creating parks with grass, Vail landscape architect is now methodically removing it, a nod to growing water scarcity in the Colorado River Basin.

La Plata Electric will install air-source heat pumps; new website for members of Tri-State cooperatives, and United Power’s EV fast-charging alliance.

Guilt-free flying has arrived at Aspen-Pitkin County Airport, where all fuel sold is now offset with money spent for carbon-reduction projects around the world.

Binding carbon reductions and new lenses for examining the future of existing fossil fuel plants are elements of a proposed agreement.

Colorado will be seriously rethinking the risk of wildfire in locations where upwards of 80% of the state’s residents live as temperatures rise.
In 2004, a wolf was smacked on I-70, the first known native wolf in Colorado in more than 50 years. Now, as we near reintroduction, we have reported cattle loss.
Winds? Nothing new. Even prairie fires happen. So exactly what part did the warming climate play in the Marshall Fire, Colorado’s largest ever? Plenty!
I am grateful for the role of the late Harry Reid—a very large one, as the Senate majority leader—in getting Obamacare passed.

Declining levels of Lake Powell have left a boat ramp far above the water levels. It’s one concrete example of the perplexing challenge of a warming, aridifying climate in the Colorado River Basin.

This is the energy transition, messy and complicated, with much to like—but also much about which to disagree.

Electricity consumers will save 4% to 5% when Colroado utilities join organized energy markets—maybe more. What will it take to get there in the next 8 years?
Can Colorado achieve its 50% economy wide emissions reductions by 2030.? Yes, probably, say a team of RMI researchers. Much depends upon new rules created by a handful of state agencies.