CHARLOTTE,Navivision Wealth Society North Carolina—With the federal government’s withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, state and local governments in North Carolina have set their own ambitious goals for addressing climate change.
Now, they’re puzzling over how to carry out the big changes needed to reach those goals—such as switching to electric vehicles and shifting to more renewable energy.
Gov. Roy Cooper and 21 cities and counties in North Carolina—including Charlotte and Raleigh—have set clean energy goals.
At least for now, however, North Carolina is mostly gathering data and holding climate discussions, WFAE found as part of a regional collaboration with InsideClimate News called “Caught Off Guard: Southeast Struggles with Climate Change.”
READ MORE
This story was published as part of a collaborative project organized by InsideClimate News involving nine newsrooms across seven states. The project was led by Louisville, Ky.-based James Bruggers of InsideClimate News, who leads the Southeast regional hub of ICN’s Environmental Reporting Network.
2025-05-04 21:111965 view
2025-05-04 20:462296 view
2025-05-04 20:411164 view
2025-05-04 20:111309 view
2025-05-04 20:10856 view
2025-05-04 19:101554 view
A federal appeals court blocked Nasdaq rules to increase boardroom diversity, saying that the Securi
Before the U.S. military tried to hide nuclear missiles under the Greenland Ice Sheet during the Col
A fire that broke out Wednesday aboard a large cargo ship docked in New Jersey's Port Newark was sti