
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Here is this week’s Climate Watch 01.21.26
Story 1 — U.S. lawmakers push to restore energy reliability
Congressional leaders are advancing legislation aimed at speeding approvals for oil, gas, and pipeline projects. Supporters say the effort restores sound energy policy after years of regulatory delays that raised prices and weakened grid reliability.
Story 2 — EU industry warns climate rules are driving manufacturing out
European manufacturers are warning lawmakers that strict climate regulations are forcing energy-intensive industries to relocate overseas. Business groups say high power costs and compliance burdens are undermining competitiveness and threatening jobs.
Story 3 — UK reconsiders energy transition after affordability backlash
British officials are facing mounting pressure to revisit green energy mandates as households and businesses struggle with rising electricity bills. Critics argue reliable fossil fuel generation remains essential to stabilize prices and prevent shortages.
Story 4 — Strong earthquake jolts Pacific seismic zone
A powerful earthquake struck along a major Pacific fault line this week. Scientists say the event is consistent with natural tectonic plate movement and highlights the Earth’s ongoing seismic activity unrelated to climate policy or atmospheric conditions.
Story 5 — Volcano activity increases along active plate boundary
Geologists are monitoring increased volcanic activity in a long-active volcanic region, citing magma movement deep below the surface. Experts emphasize this is normal behavior in tectonically active zones shaped by natural Earth processes.
Story 6 — Global data confirms fossil fuels remain dominant
Latest global energy figures show oil, natural gas, and coal continue to supply the majority of the world’s power. Analysts say the data reinforces the need for realistic energy policies that prioritize reliability, affordability, and economic growth.
CLIMATE WATCH — WEEKLY EDITION
By James Watkins3.8
119119 ratings
Here is this week’s Climate Watch 01.21.26
Story 1 — U.S. lawmakers push to restore energy reliability
Congressional leaders are advancing legislation aimed at speeding approvals for oil, gas, and pipeline projects. Supporters say the effort restores sound energy policy after years of regulatory delays that raised prices and weakened grid reliability.
Story 2 — EU industry warns climate rules are driving manufacturing out
European manufacturers are warning lawmakers that strict climate regulations are forcing energy-intensive industries to relocate overseas. Business groups say high power costs and compliance burdens are undermining competitiveness and threatening jobs.
Story 3 — UK reconsiders energy transition after affordability backlash
British officials are facing mounting pressure to revisit green energy mandates as households and businesses struggle with rising electricity bills. Critics argue reliable fossil fuel generation remains essential to stabilize prices and prevent shortages.
Story 4 — Strong earthquake jolts Pacific seismic zone
A powerful earthquake struck along a major Pacific fault line this week. Scientists say the event is consistent with natural tectonic plate movement and highlights the Earth’s ongoing seismic activity unrelated to climate policy or atmospheric conditions.
Story 5 — Volcano activity increases along active plate boundary
Geologists are monitoring increased volcanic activity in a long-active volcanic region, citing magma movement deep below the surface. Experts emphasize this is normal behavior in tectonically active zones shaped by natural Earth processes.
Story 6 — Global data confirms fossil fuels remain dominant
Latest global energy figures show oil, natural gas, and coal continue to supply the majority of the world’s power. Analysts say the data reinforces the need for realistic energy policies that prioritize reliability, affordability, and economic growth.
CLIMATE WATCH — WEEKLY EDITION