On cinema, conversations and context-based sustainability.

Women are more likely than men to suffer from the effects of a changing climate. These leaders are leaning in to ensure that doesn’t happen.

Major automakers race to adapt to shared-car demand, startups compete for the smart mobility wave and data concerns speed up.

Renewable energy’s growing pains: Distributed solar and wind power potentially could throw a wrench in the age-old utility business model.

The city has developed new indicators that could help urban communities keep closer tabs on local progress.

Effectively addressing the barriers to creating the world so many wish to see is a tall order. In that effort, we shouldn’t expect complete change overnight.Change is often incremental. Awareness is often incremental. It comes in waves, as people get inspired by an idea, and they become the role models that inspire other people. Increasing waves of action correspond to increasing waves of awareness, as those that resonate with an idea reflect the idea back out to compete in the battle of ideas and earn increasing amounts of mental bandwidth.

On this week’s podcast: Why 2017 is a big year for investor activists, a Q&A with Brady Walkinshaw of Grist, and the women mayors leading the fight against climate change at the C40 Cities Women4Climate Summit.

Check out what our young GreenBiz 17 Emerging Leaders have to say about the world of corporate sustainability.

Cary Krosinsky discusses the shift towards value-first impact investing.

4 reasons why the Trump administration should reconsider dismantling our current automotive fuel standards.