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Environmental Defense Fund

Environmental Defense Fund or EDF (formerly known as Environmental Defense) is a United States-based nonprofit environmental advocacy group. The group is known for its work on issues including global warming, ecosystem restoration, oceans, and human health, and advocates using sound science, economics and law to find environmental solutions that work. It is nonpartisan, and its work often advocates market-based solutions to environmental problems.

Founded

1967 (1967)

Worldwide

Science, economic incentives, partnerships, nonpartisan police

1,500,000+[1]

US$146,000,000[2]

500+[3]

The group's headquarters are in New York City, with offices across the US, with scientists and policy specialists working worldwide. US regional offices include Austin, Texas; Boston; Boulder, Colorado; Los Angeles; Raleigh, North Carolina; San Francisco; Washington, D.C. and St. Petersburg, Florida. The group has a growing international presence, with offices in London, Brussels, Mumbai and Beijing.


Fred Krupp has served as its president since 1984.[4] In May 2011 Krupp was among a group of experts named by US Department of Energy Secretary Steven Chu to a subcommittee of the Energy Advisory Board that was charged with making recommendations to improve the safety and environmental performance of natural gas hydraulic fracturing from shale formations.[5][6] The subcommittee issued an interim report in August and its final report in November of the same year.[7]


In 1991, The Economist called EDF "America's most economically literate green campaigners."[8] The organization was ranked first among environmental groups in a 2007 Financial Times global study of 850 business-nonprofit partnerships.[9] Charity Navigator, an independent charity evaluator, has given EDF a four-out-of-four stars rating overall since June 1, 2012.[10]

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History[edit]

The organization's founders, including Art Cooley,[11] Robert Burnap,[12][13] George Woodwell, Charles Wurster,[14][15] Dennis Puleston, Victor Yannacone and Robert Smolker, discovered in the mid-1960s that the osprey and other large raptors were rapidly disappearing. Their research uncovered a link between the spraying of DDT to kill mosquitos and thinning egg shells of large birds. Their research was most likely based on the book Silent Spring by Rachel Carson about the dangers of DDT and the effects that it had on birds, published in 1962. Carson, who died in 1964, is noted as the scientist who inspired the environmental movement. The founders of EDF successfully sought a ban on DDT in Suffolk County, Long Island, New York. Next, they succeeded in banning DDT statewide, then took their efforts nationally.[16][17][18]


In looking back at passage of the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974, top EPA officials responsible for implementing the law recall that EDF published a statistical study that supported a link between organic contaminants and cancer rates in the City of New Orleans, a study that received a tremendous amount of media attention and certainly contributed to the enactment of the law.[19]


On April 11, 2018, the group announced plans for MethaneSAT, a satellite to help identify global methane emissions, concentrating on the 50 major oil and gas regions responsible for 80% of methane production. The satellite launched on March 4, 2024.[20] EDF says it will make the data public.[21][22] The goal is to help reduce methane emissions by 45% by 2025.[23] Funding for the project comes from The Audacious Project, an initiative of the worldwide TED conference group.[24] MethaneSAT will provide data on methane emissions that can be combined with other satellite data sources including Tropomi, GHGSat and the CarbonMapper program.[25]

Corporate partnerships – EDF receives millions in funding from organizations with strong corporate ties, such as the Walton Family Foundation.

[26]

Environmental economics – The organization promotes the use of markets and incentives to help solve environmental problems. Examples of this approach at work include catch shares the cap-and-trade plan written into the Clean Air Act (United States).[28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39]

[27]

1967 – A group of scientists forms the organization and sets out to ban (succeeding in 1972).[17] (See DDT ban.)

DDT

1970 – Efforts to ban hunting.[40][41]

whale

1974 – An Environmental Defense Fund report on potential health risks of water[42] based on EPA analytical studies[43] helps pass the Safe Drinking Water Act,[44] establishing the first comprehensive health standards for water nationwide.

Mississippi River

1985 – Helped convince federal regulators to phase out lead from gasoline,[46] leading to a dramatic decline in childhood lead poisoning.[47]

[45]

1986 – Pushed to institute biodegradable food-packaging containers.[48]

McDonald's

1987 – Played a key role in the treaty to phase out the use of , chemicals that many researchers believe damage the Earth's ozone layer, although CFC-22 was continued to be allowed, renamed H-CFC-22 to avoid banning.[49][50]

CFCs

1990 – Designed Title IV of the , which incorporates market-based methods to cut air pollution and acid rain.[33] The measures reduced sulfur dioxide pollution faster than expected, and at a fraction of the cost.[51]

Clean Air Act

1990 – Improved packaging, reducing solid waste in a groundbreaking corporate partnership, which came after dozens of other groups had protested McDonald's use of styrofoam packaging and the corporation was looking for a way to "save face" by claiming EDF's advocacy was the reason for the shift. The Citizens Clearinghouse on Hazardous Waste, founded by Lois Gibbs, helped coordinate the protests of McDonald's.[52][53]

McDonald's

1993 – EDF was one of seven foundation-funded environmental groups to endorse the NAFTA Treaty.

1995 – Designed the plan[54][55] that gives landowners new incentives to help endangered species on their property.

Safe Harbor

2000 – Seven of the world's largest corporations join Environmental Defense in a partnership to address global warming, setting firm targets to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.[57]

[56]

2001, 2004, 2008 – Won measures resulting in cleaner vehicle exhaust from trucks, ships and other vehicles.

[58]

2002 – Initiated the campaign to remove the in Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park.[59][60]

O'Shaughnessy Dam

2004 – Culmination of four-year partnership with to develop and deploy hybrid electric trucks. The new vehicles cut smog-forming pollution by 65%, reduce soot by 96%, and move 57% farther on a gallon of fuel.

FedEx

2006 – Co-authored the California with Natural Resources Defense Council.[61][62]

Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006

2006 – Led adoption of catch shares, a science-based method to manage fishing and control fish population decline.[64]

[63]

2007 – Co-founded United States (US-CAP), a coalition of major corporations and environmental groups supporting action on global warming, including a market-based carbon emissions cap. Corporate participants include GE, DuPont and Duke Energy; non-profit groups involved are Pew Center on Global Climate Change, Natural Resources Defense Council and the World Resources Institute, a co-founder.[65][66]

Climate Action Partnership

2007 – Helped negotiate an environmental codicil as part of 's buyout of TXU.[67][68]

Texas Pacific

2008–2011 – Founded and developed the Climate Corps program, which matches organizations with MBA and MPA students to uncover energy savings.[70]

[69]

2011 – Successful campaign to clean up highly-polluting heating oil in New York City.[72]

[71]

2011 – Built coalition to defeat , an industry-backed ballot initiative that would have blocked California's Global Warming Solutions Act (AB32).[73]

Proposition 23

Key accomplishments of Environmental Defense Fund include:

Sustainability

Biodiversity

Global warming

Recycling

Ecology

Earth Science

Natural environment

Natural landscape

Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency

Environmental history of the United States

Environmental Defense Fund

(In partnership with the Ad Council)

Fightglobalwarming.com

Environmental Defence Canada

YouTube channel

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