“A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.” --Winston Churchill
“A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.” --Winston Churchill
The future is not what it used to be.
In the 1990s, the push for electric vehicles gained momentum in response to national security concerns over our reliance on imported fuels and tailpipe emissions.
Climate change is no longer an issue that our politicians can kick down the road for someone else to deal with at some point in the future.
Nearly 40 years ago, President Carter proclaimed the dawn of the solar age. But that proclamation may have been a little premature.
The parable of the frog and boiling water is hundreds of years old. It has been used throughout history as a metaphor for circumstances in life when people are unable to see gradual change around them.
Four years ago the issue of climate change did not come up even once in the three presidential debates between President Obama and his Republican rival, Mitt Romney.
Whatever happened to Arizona’s support for policies to protect our environment? Where has our sense of environmental responsibility gone?
This year the Tucson Solar Potluck will be celebrating the art of solar cooking for the 34th consecutive year with a gathering of solar chefs at Catalina State Park on April 30.
Earth Day is April 22nd. This marks the 46th Earth Day, and over the years it has taken on many different meanings for many different people.
A decade ago Governor Napolitano asked me to present at an energy forum of the National Governors Association taking place in Wilmington, Delaware.
The chaotic political season that has defined the 2016 presidential campaign experienced a jolt over the Presidents' Day weekend with the passing of Justice Scalia.
This marks my 40th year working in the renewable energy space that is solar energy.
It's not that I wanted to stay silent on the whole Corporation Commission mess...
In the Spring of 1987, Ray Harm sat on the veranda of his solar-powered ranch house on the edge of arroyo in Browns Canyon -- explaining climate change to me.
When you have been involved in this industry for five decades, it’s hard to look at where solar energy is today -- compared to where it was in the 1970s -- and not be thankful.
The modern era of the solar energy movement can be traced to the late 1970s.
Two years ago the Arizona Solar Center asked me to write this blog as a way to give a voice to people that didn't have a voice in the looming battle over rooftop solar.
In February 2014, the Arizona Republic's Ryan Randazzo wrote about a plan drafted by a political consulting group commissioned by the state's largest utility "to help APS change or alter the Arizona Corporation Commission".
This past month Arizonans witnessed the dismantling of its Energy Office in what was described as a budget saving move.
Carbon targets aren't anything new. States and local governments have set targets for reducing carbon pollution going back more than a decade.