Indivisible Colorado Environment

Climate Crisis

Colorado, the nation, and the world are facing the dire reality that climate change is having real and devastating impacts on our planet. Our state has seen years of prolonged drought, catastrophic forest fires, epic flooding, and unpredictable snowfall, and climate change is having an unprecedented impact on our outdoor recreation and tourism economies. Additionally, climate change and air pollution of all types more highly impact those who can least afford it, most specifically communities of color.

According to IPCC, we must cut our carbon emissions by 50% by 2030 and 100% by 2050 (carbon neutral) to ensure a sustainable future. This is a goal that every responsible citizen should keep in mind and fight for. Unfortunately, the federal government is currently led by climate change deniers, so it’s up to the state and local governments to take the lead. As activists, it’s our duty to ensure that Colorado will take the lead, together with other blue and purple states in this country.

The five largest emitting sectors in Colorado are electricity, transportation, residential heating and cooling, industrial process, and oil and gas development. We need sector specific policies to reduce emissions, as well as a carbon emission cap consistent with the IPCC recommendation.

What we need to do:

Oil and Gas Development

Oil and natural gas have significant impacts on our environment, including methane and carbon pollution, air and ozone pollution, surface and groundwater contamination, and habitat fragmentation. It’s particularly dangerous to develop near Superfund sites, homes, schools, water sources, wildlife habitat, and sensitive public lands.

What we need to do:

Public Land, Water, Air and Wildlife 

Colorado’s population is projected to grow by 50% by 2050. The population increase, together with gas and oil extraction activities, changing climate, pollution, overuse, growth of tourism and traditional management approaches are putting stress on our public land, water, air and wildlife habitat. Federal deregulation that guts the Endangered Species Act, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, and public land protection will threaten the economy of Colorado, our health and our lifestyle. 

What we need to do:

Suggested Actions

With so much at stake, it’s essential that each and every one of us will take action. 

Take actions per Indivisible 2.0:

Join advocacy groups: