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You can help pass the nation’s toughest plastic policy

June 9th, 2025

Hey team, and welcome back to one5c! Before we get into this week’s walk through the news, I wanted to share a little treat: We just added 100+ sustainable, delicious recipes to the one5c archive. The entire library is available to Premium Members. We’ll be serving up many of our favorites as part of the regular rotation. First up? A roundup of eats that won’t heat up the kitchen in the dead of summer. Keep scrolling after the digest to check it out. —Corinne 


WHAT WE’RE INTO THIS WEEK

By Sara Kiley Watson

Action alert

A new bill could reduce plastic waste—but it needs your help to pass

This week, New York State Assembly members could pass what Beyond Plastics calls the “most comprehensive plastic reduction legislation in the nation.” The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act (PRRIA) would require companies that sell or distribute packaging materials to develop a packaging reduction and recycling plan—keeping the burden of waste disposal on these companies, not taxpayers. Research shows that, if implemented, New Yorkers would save $1.3 billion in just one decade due to a reduction in waste management costs. The assembly’s session ends this Thursday, so it’s absolutely crucial to call lawmakers and tell them to pass PRRIA. This could be the first law of its kind in the country, and may pave the way for others—just like New York’s right-to-repair law. If you live in New York State, use this link to find your assembly member, and if you don’t, forward this email on to any New Yorkers.

Cause for optimism

Massachusetts breaks the code on financing its grid 

Areas eyeing big built-outs of renewables in the U.S. often face a common obstacle: a grid in need of costly upgrades. However, the state of Massachusetts is taking a new approach to get community solar installations and its grid moving in the right direction. Its plans—snoozily dubbed Capital Investment Projects—allow solar providers to spread their upfront grid connection costs onto future utility bills, reports Canary Media. Don’t worry, it’s not a cash grab: To be part of the program, developers have to pay back a portion of those costs when they hook up to the grid, and also prove that their work will improve reliability and/or spur greater access to cheap community solar. Other states, including New York and California, are already looking at similar policies to boost their own renewable energy goals. 

Good read

The researchers making wind turbines bird-safe

Ah, the song of the wind turbine NIMBY: What about the birds? It’s a tricky one to refute, because the naysayers are not entirely wrong. While more birds die from run-ins with domestic cats or flying into windows than from collisions with wind turbines, the American Bird Conservancy estimated in 2021 that more than a million met their end via turbine. (For context, the global bird population is in the neighborhood of 50 billion.) That’s not a reason to nix the spinning blades, reports Adam Welz for Yale360, but rather a call to understand why birds collide with turbines so that we can stop it from happening. In his feature, Welz explores the tactics ornithologists and entrepreneurs are trying to help these two titans of the skies coexist, ranging from the simplest of tactics like picking better colors to advanced tech like bird detection that shuts the spinners down when a feathery friend gets too close for comfort.

Accountability check

Greta Thunberg and other activists headed to Gaza intercepted and detained

Israel has intercepted and detained Greta Thunberg, the 22-year-old activist who sparked the youth climate movement, and several other activists as they headed toward Gaza with humanitarian aid on a sailing vessel called Madleen. The boat is operated by the humanitarian aid organization Freedom Flotilla Coalition, and their last vessel was targeted by a drone strike in May. Thunberg has been outspoken on the ties between the climate crisis and social justice. “I’m a climate activist because I care about human and planetary well-being, and those are extremely interlinked,” she told donor-funded news outlet Democracy Now last week. The data backs her up: Recent findings from an international group of experts estimate that the war in Gaza will exceed 31 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions, which is more than the combined 2023 annual emissions of Costa Rica and Estonia. The location of the Madleen and the activists is still not confirmed as of 6 AM eastern time.  


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CONSUME THIS

4 summer recipes that won’t heat up the kitchen

By Gabriella Vigoreaux; additional reporting by Corinne Iozzio

Stove knob turned off with hand cutting vegetables over
Natalie Ammari/one5c
It doesn’t take a degree in thermodynamics to know that firing up the oven or stove in the summer is bad news for your energy bill—let alone your desire to be in the kitchen. Taken together, a home’s appliances, which include everything from the dryer to the oven, contribute around 16% of the heat entering a domicile. All on its own, a cooker can warm up a room by as much as 10 degrees, according to one heat-gun-equipped Ph.D. Getting relief comes with a cost: Estimates vary, but common wisdom is that every degree you nudge the thermostat in either direction results in a 3% change in your home’s heating and cooling costs.

It’s enough to make you mainline fudge-cicles for the next three months, but that’s not exactly the stuff of a well-rounded “adult” diet. (Boooooo!) Housing whole watermelons or big bowls of salad won’t get the job done either. But, in this season of produce plenty, it is entirely possible to eat deliciously, sumptuously, and sustainably without heating up a single thing. These four recipes are among our favorites for no-cook season.

Fattoush-ish tomato salad with tofu ‘feta’
Even if you don’t jibe with this entire recipe, it’s worth a look for its simple DIY ‘feta’ all on its own. A quick brine transforms a block of firm tofu into a stand-in for the salty, cheesy mainstay that’s good enough to fool even some devoted tofu skeptics. (And it has.) The faux fromage is great right out of the jar, but even better as a topping in this marriage of a classic caprese and fattoush salad—a Middle Eastern dish of chopped veggies and herbs atop crunchy pita chips.

Curried chickpea salad sandwich
It can be tricky to get the right consistency (not too wet, not too dry) when piling a bean-based salad onto a sandwich. Garbanzos are the least creamy of the canned bean varieties, which means they stay nice and chunky when you mash ’em up to use as a swap for chicken in this curry-spiced and fruit-studded salad. The mix gets better as it sits, so if you’re among the meal-prepper set or have a picnic menu to plan, whip up a big batch and snack on it all week.
Carrot-beet salad with dates and pistachios
This recipe is built around one of our favorite underrated kitchen tools: the box grater. It’s cheap, easy to find, and pretty great (😉) at making salads more fun and filling. Grated roots and veggies, like beets and carrots, are hearty enough to be main ingredients, and they hold up really well in heat—very much unlike beds of leafy greens. Piling this quick salad on top of a plateful of hummus can even transform it into a proper warm-weather meal.

Key lime icebox cake(free taste for non-Premium subscribers)
Icebox cakes are normally celebrations of whipped cream—but this citrus-spiked one is totally dairy-free. It’s based on a traditional Mexican dessert called a Carlota de limón, which translates to lime charlotte. To go plant-based, our version uses Biscoff biscuits (a secretly vegan favorite at the grocery store) and swaps the dairy for coconut-based counterparts. The cream comes together in the blender, and the whole thing chills in the fridge, where the layers of cookies take on a wonderfully cakelike texture.

MIC-DROP CLIMATE STAT

-6%

The expected drop in demand for oil in 2025, the first year-on-year decline since 2020 and the largest since 2016, according to new analysis from the International Energy Agency.


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