Providing information and ideas to build a healthier, more sustainable America.

- May 2023 -

Warehouses: an untapped solar opportunity

Putting solar panels on the roofs of America’s bigger warehouses could generate enough electricity to power 19.4 million homes each year. Our analysis with Environment America Research & Policy Center, Solar on Warehouses, found that there are over 450,000 medium and large warehouses in the U.S., with a collective rooftop area of 16.4 billion square feet. Generating all of the potential warehouse rooftop solar electricity could help reduce climate emissions from electricity generation equivalent to taking 24 million gas-powered cars off the road each year. The analysis was covered by The Hill, CleanTechnica and Electrek.

America’s dirtiest industrial facilities

Just 50 facilities across the U.S. emitted more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere in 2021 than every individual state except Texas, according to our recent analysis of climate emissions based on required reporting to the EPA. Forty-five of the 50 facilities are fossil fuel power plants, mostly coal and/or gas plants. The top polluting facility alone does more damage to the climate than the entire state of Maine. Our report was published just before the Biden administration proposed new regulations to clean up dirty power plants.

The top toxic water polluters in each state

Building off Wasting our Waterways 2022, released last September, we mapped the top toxic water polluting facilities of 2020 in each state in a new interactive tool. Use it to figure out which power plants, mines or industrial facilities dumped the most toxic chemicals into waterways in your state, and where they are.

Food for thought

Analyst James Horrox considers the benefits of urban trees and new federal funding to plant them … Senior Analyst Tony Dutzik explains why we shouldn’t (and don’t have to) pit clean energy and conservation against each other … An op-ed by Tony Dutzik and Environment America’s Lisa Frank in The Hill explores the “permitting reform” debate, and why changes to regulations cannot allow more fossil fuel developmentWith PennEnvironment Research & Policy Center, we reported on the 12 largest climate polluting facilities in Pennsylvania … We also investigated the 10 most-toxic industrial air polluters in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, and created an interactive map that includes data on the health effects of the chemicals released  and the communities affected by the pollution.

Frontier Group staff

Susan Rakov, Director

Tony Dutzik and Elizabeth Ridlington, Associate Directors and Senior Policy Analysts

James Horrox and Bryn Huxley-Reicher, Policy Analysts

Frontier Group is part of The Public Interest Network, which operates and supports organizations committed to a shared vision of a better world and a strategic approach to social change.

Frontier Group
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