Liquefied natural gas
Pam Radtke is editor of Floodlight’s Gulf Coast team, which spans Louisiana and Texas. Based in New Orleans, she is a veteran editor and reporter focused on energy, environment and climate change. She was part of the New Orleans Times-Picayune team that was awarded two Pulitzer prizes for coverage of Hurricane Katrina’s aftermath.
Pam served as an energy and environment editor at CQ Roll Call, and as a correspondent for Platts, where her work spanned from utility regulation to the BP oil spill. Most recently she was a deputy editor at Engineering News-Record, where she led and wrote multiple award-winning climate-related packages. Pam’s reporting has also appeared in HuffPost and the Guardian.
The Latest from Pam Radtke / Floodlight
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Climate activists have rallied to stop the Calcasieu Pass 2 facility, or CP2, in Louisiana. Now the final decision rests with the Department of Energy.
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Electrification
Data centers, bitcoin and EVs send utilities scrambling for more power
U.S. energy use has been flat, but bitcoin, data centers and EVs are fueling a spike and threatening climate goals. -
Liquefied natural gas
How safe are LNG terminals? Nearby communities have no way of knowing
As more liquefied natural gas terminals are built along the U.S. Gulf Coast, residents say a lack of transparency leaves them unsure about the safety hazards.
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