Ingrid Lobet
Investigative Reporter, inewsourceIngrid Lobet previously worked with the team of journalists at inewsource, a nonprofit journalism enterprise embedded in the KPBS newsroom. Lobet has covered the environment, energy and climate for 14 years and been recognized with several national awards, including IRE, Edward R. Murrow, Scripps Howard and the Polk (team). She served on the investigative team at the Houston Chronicle and produced stories for Marketplace and the Center for Investigative Reporting. When screen time overwhelms she reverts to carpentry, her first trade.
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Last year 35 percent of all the electricity provided by San Diego Gas & Electric came from renewable sources — solar and wind — a record for the company and for any investor-owned utility in California.
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For the first time, it’s possible to visualize where powerful, invisible methane gas hovers over the landscape of San Diego County.
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When most people think about solar energy, they think about solar photovoltaic panels that make electricity. But there are also solar water heating systems, which can be cheaper.
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Methane that escaped from the blown-out well caused a significant setback in California’s efforts to control greenhouse gases, but Southern California Gas has promised to mitigate the damage to the environment.
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Well operated legally but methods risky, experts say
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Four California state senators are announcing on Monday a package of legislation aimed at some of the shortcomings they say are already known to have contributed to the blowout.
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