Protect the Right to Vote: Be a Poll Worker on Election Day Sign Up Today
LCV works to protect our country’s public lands and waters. We uplift local movements and drive federal action to increase opportunities for all people to experience and feel welcome in our public lands, while turning our public lands into climate change solutions.
Humanity’s ever expanding footprint, loss of natural areas to development, and the climate crisis all strain our natural systems. This puts the water, air, and food supplies upon which every living thing depends in jeopardy. The simplest and most effective way to address this complex crisis is to preserve more healthy lands and waters. That is why LCV is helping to lead the fight to protect 30% of America’s lands and waters by 2030 – our part in a global, science-backed effort to protect 30% of Earth’s land and ocean by 2030, dubbed 30×30.
We push Congress and the executive branch to protect more iconic and important habitats through monuments, marine sanctuaries, and other protected public lands and waters. But how we achieve the preservation of 30% of America’s lands and waters is as important as reaching this goal. By educating and engaging the public, the media, and decision-makers on the important role our public lands play in leading the fight towards a clean energy future, we tackle legacy pollution on public lands and build a healthy, sustainable environment for all.
Every community needs access to clean air, clean water, and a healthy environment to enjoy the benefits of the outdoors. The United States has a painful legacy of racism and exclusion toward Indigenous and communities of color, and natural resource policy is no exception. The ugly history of land theft perpetrated by the federal government on Indigenous tribes, and the persistent disregard for their sovereignty, is perhaps the most glaring example. Yet this pattern of inequity has continued to the present day, including the location of far more industrial development and pollution and less access to nature in and near low-income communities of color. That is why LCV is committed to pursuing policies that both protect nature and share its benefits more equitably with all communities. We also seek to prioritize authentically partnering with and lifting up organizations led by people of color, to ensure that the conservation movement reflects the diversity of our country.
While many people think of our country’s public lands as protected from industrial development, the reality is that a staggering amount of drilling and coal mining occurs on them. Nearly one-quarter of all U.S. carbon emissions are generated from energy extracted on public lands and waters. It is time to turn our public lands and waters into solutions to the climate crisis.
To make this transition, LCV works to stop fossil fuel extraction on federal lands and increase solar, wind, and other forms of clean energy in ways that are supported by the communities impacted by them. We take critically important habitats off the table for drilling and mining. We strategically focus on habitats that are important sources of clean drinking water, outdoor recreation access, fish and wildlife, and cultural uses – like the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. We also invest in forests, wetlands, mangroves and other areas that safely store carbon pollution in the ground and out of our atmosphere.
Our country’s national parks, wildlife refuges, forests and other public lands are a popular source of pride for many people. Unfortunately, they are often inaccessible, unwelcoming, and exclude communities of color, disabled people, low-income communities, Indigenous tribes, and LGBTQ+ communities. LCV seeks to tear down these barriers and create a welcoming, inclusive system of public lands through outreach and policy.
National parks and other public lands don’t just protect nature; they also preserve and interpret our country’s history. The choice of whose history to preserve has not been equitable, resulting in a disproportionately low number (¼) of national parks and monuments that tell the stories of diverse communities. That is why LCV worked to protect places such as the Stonewall National Monument, Belmont-Paul Women’s Equality National Monument, and Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument – and why we continue to advocate for our public lands to tell a more complete story of the United States.
We are also mindful that our public lands rightfully belong to Indigenous people and have been stewarded by them since time immemorial. We are committed to supporting Tribal Nations’ efforts to foster greater tribal sovereignty as well as co-management and co-stewardship arrangements for our public lands, such as the management structure established for the Bears Ears National Monument in Utah.
Act Now
More protections are under consideration for 13 million acres of land in the Western Arctic. This land is home to a vast array of species, miles of untrammeled tundra, and the Gwich’in Nation, the northernmost Indian Nation in North America. The region is under severe threat from the climate crisis and oil and gas development. We must ensure that one of the wildest and most pristine places on Earth is protected. Tell the Biden-Harris administration you support maximum protection for America’s Arctic.
Share Your SupportEvery Monday, we round up five of the best good climate news stories we're celebrating. This week we cover the EPA's new, stricter vehicle emissions standards, American Climate Corps applications, DOE funding for a Tribal solar microgrid, a win for California's Yurok Tribe, and investments in transportation infrastructure.
Are your members of Congress voting to protect people and the planet – or polluters and special interests? Find out with the 2023 Scorecard, and learn how you can hold your members of Congress accountable.
Every Monday, we round up five of the best good climate news stories we’re celebrating. This week we’re covering President Biden’s conservation record, investments in clean school buses and EV charging infrastructure, the Western hemisphere’s largest wind development, and mandatory composting in France.
Every Monday, we round up five of the best good climate news stories we’re celebrating this week. This week we’re covering big wins for climate on Election Day, the Biden administration's rural clean energy investments, Michigan's historic clean energy bill and more.
For nearly a decade, Big Oil has been trying to run a natural gas pipeline 300 miles across Virginia and West Virginia, cutting through the Jefferson National Forest and crossing hundreds of waterways and wetlands. The Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) will have devastating consequences not only for the environment, but also for the many communities along its path whose health will be jeopardized by air and water pollution. Here’s what you need to know.