Skip to main content

News

As an active member of the energy community, Gotham 360 participates in various local and national organizations, associations and advisory boards. The Gotham 360 team remains a recurrent presence in print and digital media, sharing our knowledge of energy markets, risk mitigation, sustainability and cost savings in today’s complex energy landscape.

Articles in Category: Women Owned Business

WE ACT for Environmental Justice

Diversity in Energy Spotlight

WE ACT for Environmental Justice

WE ACT for Environmental Justice was founded in 1988 in response to environmental racism in Harlem. The three founders of WE ACT were fundamental in the beginnings of the environmental justice movement, which officially began in 1991. WE ACT works hard to represent BIPOC voices in an environmentalist movement that is overwhelmingly white. For more information on the environmental justice movement, read our primer here.

New York City Environmental Justice Alliance

Diversity In Energy Spotlight

New York City Environmental Justice Alliance

The environmental justice movement works to address the inequities in US environmental policy which disproportionately expose Black people to environmental hazards including close proximity to waste facilities, poor quality water infrastructure, and air pollution. Last week, we provided a primer on the environmental justice movement which discusses the movement’s origin, history, and urgent relevance today. We will continue to call attention to the environmental justice movement by highlighting organizations doing this important work. Today, we focus on the New York City Environmental Justice Alliance.

Environmental Justice Primer

Environmental Justice Primer

For those of you unfamiliar with the concept of environmental justice, there is no better time than the present to familiarize yourself. The events of 2020 have brought to national attention the systemic racism and subsequent injustices Black people in our country face on a daily basis. The outbreak of coronavirus has disproportionately affected the Black community and is evidence of other systematic inequalities Black people face every day, including access to health care and equitable treatment by healthcare workers. Black people continue to face police brutality (not only now, but for centuries in this country), as evidenced by the recent deaths of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd.

The American Association of Blacks in Energy (AABE)

Diversity In Energy Spotlight

The American Association of Blacks in Energy (AABE)

The American Association of Blacks in Energy (AABE) was founded by Clarke A. Watson, a prominent black community activist and mentor, in the summer of 1977. Watson saw a need for change in U.S. national energy policy and a need for black people and other minorities to have a voice in energy policymaking. In response to the energy crisis of the 1970s, President Jimmy Carter established a special task force to study the energy problem and develop recommendations. There were no persons of color representing the interests of black people and other minorities on the task force.