Hot in Texas

Austin’s Climate Program

USA Today’s Doyle Rice wrote on March 29, 2026, “Double danger? Climate change, El Niño push Earth ‘beyond its limits'”:

A freakish March heat wave has already pushed temperatures to summertime levels throughout much of the western and central United States, but a new report comes with a dire warning: This is just the beginning.

The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) announced on March 23 that the planet’s climate is now “more out of balance than at any time in observed history.”

The MIT Climate Portal shares scientific insights:

“Greenhouse gases prevent some heat from escaping the Earth out into space, and while this is a natural phenomenon, human behavior has now added so much greenhouse gas that our atmosphere is keeping in too much heat. In fact, ice core data shows us that there is now more CO2 in our atmosphere than at any point in at least the past 800,000 years. Because of this, our planet is almost 1.8°F hotter than it was in the 1880s.”

The website of the Austin Climate Action and Resilience office shares simple to understand information about how individuals and families can help reduce their own “carbon footprint.” Among the initial suggestions:

  1. Ditch the plastic water bottles.
  2. Use cold water for laundry.
  3. Drive efficiently.
  4. Incorporate walking or biking into your daily routine.
  5. Adjust your thermostat.
  6. Recycle and reuse.
  7. Keep tires properly inflated.

We urge our readers to visit the City of Austin website for more helpful suggestions along these lines!

Another thing we hope you will do, is join the secure Citizens’ Climate Lobby platform, and then join the Austin Chapter (TX Austin). Then you will receive notifications of actions you can take, like writing to your elected representatives in Washington, D.C. about key issues under review at the national level, showing them that you care. CCL staff conduct detailed research prior to announcing actions requesting your engagement, so you can rest assured that you are not “stepping out” without proper preparation.


Earth Day Austin is coming up on April 11, 2026 at Huston-Tillotson University.

Historically, Earth Day ATX has been the largest sustainability event in Central Texas. Thousands of people from the Austin Area and beyond come to the Huston-Tillotson University campus to learn about conservation and sustainable solutions, celebrate our love for the environment, and get connected to the best and most innovative green businesses and organizations. With family and friends, festival attendees explore rich, in-depth programming, exciting new activities, and engaging exhibitions that allow them to discover new connections to the environment and environmental issues.

Follow the link above for more information about the event, and if you attend, please come see us at our Austin Chapter table. If you would like to volunteer, visit our Austin Chapter webpage on the CCL national website. We would love to have your help.


Longtime Austin Chapter member Carolyn M. Appleton would like to thank United States Senator John Cornyn for responding to her email request regarding permitting reform. “Permitting reform has emerged as the biggest and most important clean energy and climate policy area in the current session of Congress.” To learn about the importance of permitting reform, follow this link to the CCL website.

Heat Pump

Upgrading Homes and Buildings Can Reduce Emissions and Save You Money: Austin Energy Can Help

Electrification of homes and buildings has been a core focus area of Citizens’ Climate Lobby for the past few years. The best way to reduce appliance emissions is to switch to clean energy and, “to increase the efficiency with which we use all forms of energy to provide the services we want – heating, cooling, cooking, lighting, and more.” Did you know, furnaces generally last 15 to 20 years and hot water heaters 8 to 12 years. Hence, it is essential that we start now to accelerate the process of converting these appliances to clean energy.

Upgrading homes and other buildings can both reduce emissions and save people money. Buildings currently represent over 30% of emissions in the United States. About 10% of building emissions come directly from onsite burning of fossil fuels and almost all the rest from generating the electricity buildings use. The biggest sources of direct emissions are space and water heaters, but stoves and clothes dryers are other examples in the residential sector.

Austin Energy has an smart incentive program to help you convert to electric appliances of all kinds, from thermostats to Energy Star refrigerators, heat pump water heaters, clothes dryers, and freezers. If you are putting of replacing your old appliances, now might be the time to take advantage of these discounts! Click on the image below to reach the Austin Energy discount website.

Citizens’ Climate Lobby has developed an electrification fact sheet you can keep handy to refresh your memory about the importance of electrification.

Follow the link to reach the CCL advanced information page on building electrification and efficiency. It is packed with facts!

Health is another critical reason we should switch to electricity. A 2020 report by Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) cited research from MIT showing that “combustion emissions from the building sector now contributes to the largest share (37 percent) of premature deaths associated with air pollution, compared to other sectors like transport, industry, and power generation.” Unvented gas stoves produce indoor nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, and benzene pollution that can harm human health, including a 24 to 42% increased risk of childhood asthma!

Questions? Reach out to Dana Nuccitelli, Research Coordinator of Citizens’ Climate Lobby. Dana is an environmental scientist and climate journalist with a Master’s Degree in physics. He has written about climate change since 2010 for Skeptical Science, for The Guardian from 2013 to 2018, and since 2018 for Yale Climate Connections. In 2015 he published the book ‘Climatology versus Pseudoscience’, and he has also authored ten peer-reviewed climate studies, including a 2013 paper that found a 97% consensus among peer-reviewed climate science research that humans are the primary cause of global warming. Follow the link above to read more about Dana and to find his email address.

Residential Solar in Austin

Creative Solar Program is What We Need to Transition from Fossil Fuels

Re: Oct. 13, article, ‘A new Austin solar program could unlock a clean energy future’

Generation of solar power is a no-brainer for anyone who is worried about the warming world, extended summer seasons, rising electric bills for cooling and harmful pollution from burning fossil fuels. Yes, we can’t meet all of needs from solar and other renewables, but it is allowing many countries in the world to reach clean energy goals.

Austin Energy‘s proposed Solar Standard Offer Program would add to the Community Solar program which allows residents to invest in solar-generated electricity without installing a solar system. It will allow more participants, including renters. Use of roof tops for solar has a benefit of reducing heat gain and reducing cooling loads .

Finding creative solutions to help us transition away from fossil fuels is what we want our lawmakers to pursue. Solar Standard Offer Program will create jobs and enhance quality of life. Let us support it.

Kalpana Sutaria

Project Manager, City of Austin and Member, Austin Metro Chapter, Citizen’s Climate Lobby

Published by the Austin American-Statesman

October 20, 2024

See also, “A new Austin solar program could unlock a clean energy future” by Kaiba White (October 12, 2024).

We Need Federal Rules to Protect Outdoor Workers

Re: June 25 article, ‘Outdoor workers need increased protection’

It is sadly true that as Austin gets warmer with worsening climate, there are consequences for outdoor workers in construction, agriculture and postal work. As a project manager working on City of Austin building projects, I have experienced the hot conditions firsthand at job sites. We ensure that contractors working on city projects provide a 10-minute shade and water break once every four hours. Signs are posted in English and Spanish.

But Governor Abbott signed a law upending protections for workers directly impacted by summer heat. These workers construct infrastructure and buildings and grow food for Texans in the brutal heat. Is just 10 minutes of respite not acceptable to Abbott? Last year 279 people died because of heat in Texas.

Contractors and owners who care for workers are providing protections regardless. OSHA must act promptly to enact federal regulations to protect outdoor workers from heat exposure and illnesses.

Kalpana Sutaria

Project Manager, City of Austin and Member, Citizens’ Climate Lobby Austin

Published in the Austin American-Statesman

July 2, 2023