Frances Beinecke

Frances Beinecke
Frances Beinecke is the former president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, the nonprofit conservation group, serving since 2006...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionActivist
CountryUnited States of America
dam environmental gives government heard highway impact major opportunity project public sure
When the government undertakes or approves a major project such as a dam or highway project, it must make sure the project's impacts, environmental and otherwise, are considered. In many cases, NEPA gives the public its only opportunity to be heard about the project's impact on their community.
central change children climate dangers environmental ill obligation time widening
Climate change is the central environmental ill of our time. We have an obligation to protect our children from the dangers of this widening scourge, and we aren't yet doing enough about it.
change climate environmental health issue understood
I have long understood that climate change is not only an environmental issue - it is a humanitarian, economic, health, and justice issue as well.
bring broader dinner environmental food home plates shopping solve traces
When we go to the store, we bring home more than food - we bring home traces of broader environmental problems. But we can use our shopping carts and dinner plates to help solve some of those problems.
allow battles change conversation dynamics environmental project social won
Many environmental battles are won by delaying a destructive project long enough to change the conversation - to allow new economic, political and social dynamics to emerge.
abundant air change clean climate crisis energy environmental generate nation safer tackle tapping time
Our nation has abundant clean energy resources, and tapping them will generate jobs, make the air safer to breathe, and tackle climate change - the greatest environmental crisis of our time.
house leader environmental
House Republican leaders voted more than 300 times to undermine environmental safeguards since 2011, but almost none of these measures became law because Americans pushed back.
accelerate dangerous events extreme fail global levels reduce rise science tells unleash warming weather
The science tells us that if we fail to reduce global warming pollution, global temperatures will rise to dangerous levels and unleash devastating extreme weather events and accelerate destructive sea level rise.
array diabetes diverse gabriel highest open pasadena rates rich san starved stretching valley
The San Gabriel Valley, stretching from Pasadena to Pomona, is especially starved for open space. The valley has a rich array of ethnically diverse communities, but it also has some of the highest rates of childhood obesity and diabetes in the state.
gabriel greater monument san
The San Gabriel monument expands our natural heritage, but there is more in need of safeguarding - extraordinary places like Utah's Greater Canyonlands.
carbon change climate dangerous protect reduce single
The single most important thing we can do to protect our communities from climate change is to reduce dangerous carbon pollution.
across added california care central change climate damaged dollars extreme fields flooded health lives millions signs streets turning upside visible
The signs of climate change are visible across the nation, from the drought-stricken fields of Central California to the flooded streets of Michigan. Extreme weather is turning people's lives upside down and costing communities millions of dollars in damaged infrastructure and added health care costs.
bay bristol cool generation linger millions return salmon shallow shores waters
Every year, tens of millions of salmon return to the pristine shores of Bristol Bay in Alaska. They linger in the bay's cool, shallow waters before charging up nearby streams to spawn and create another generation of wild salmon.
annual avoid carbon chemicals climate cooling equivalent provide safer severe states united
Safer chemicals and more energy-efficient technologies can provide cooling without severe climate implications. Shifting to these alternatives could avoid the equivalent of 12 times the current annual carbon pollution of the United States by 2050.