Here on @NRDC’s Tumblr, we like to reclaim the often objectifying #womancrushwednesday hashtag to spotlight women doing rad work on behalf of the environment. They’re crushing it in the name of humanity. And we’re crushing on them as a result.
This week we’re featuring Melissa Wright, who joins the @NRDC crew on the ground at #COP21 in Paris tomorrow morning.
Melissa, how are you going to crush it in Paris? As director of the City Energy Project at NRDC, I lead a team that creates healthier and more prosperous cities by improving energy efficiency in big buildings, which are the largest source of carbon pollution in urban areas. We work with mayors’ offices and local groups to cut energy waste, create jobs, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The cities pioneering these efforts are becoming models for communities nationwide and around the world. At the climate talks in Paris, I’m looking forward to highlighting the importance of cities and their climate actions on the international stage, where hundreds of global cities will announce their commitments through the #CompactofMayors. Several of the cities we’ve worked with through the City Energy Project will be sharing their successes. I am very proud to represent the work of the all-female NRDC team and our partners across the country in Paris.
Which women at #COP21 would you consider sheroes? My personal sheroes of the #COP21 talks are all of the female mayors. Anne Hidalgo of Paris; Libby Schaaf of Oakland, California; and Marie Pascale Mbock Mioumnde of Nguibassal, Cameroon, are committing to bold local climate agendas.
Thanks for chatting, Melissa! To learn more about Melissa’s work, follow her on Twitter, @MelissaW_NRDC, and check out her NRDC Switchboard blog.
Check out other amazing NRDC women we’ve featured in past #WCWs:
Pam Rivera, who engages partner groups
Jackie Prange, who litigates for the environment
Linda Greer, who’s making fashion green
Veena Singla, who protects our health
Raya Salter, who helps build sustainable communities in cities
Victoria Rome, who represents NRDC at the California state capitol
Lena Brook, who works to protect effective antibiotics
Sasha Stashwick, who is a food policy advocate
Adrianna Quintero, who works to reimagine what an environmentalist looks like
Kate Sinding, who is senior adviser to NRDC President Rhea Suh
Kimi Narita, who works with city governments to reduce urban energy use
Elizabeth Noll, who works on energy efficiency policy
Briana Mordick, who works to reduce the environmental impacts of oil and gas production
Francine Kershaw, who wants to put genetic data into whale sanctuary development
Lara Bryant, who works to understand the connections between soil health and climate change
Elly Pepper, who works to protect endangered species from poaching
Melissa Waage, who works with communities, scientists, and lawyers to change environmental policy
Morgan Wyenn, who takes polluters to court as part of NRDC’s air program
Tracy Quinn, who uses engineering to improve water efficiency in California
Aliya Haq, who fights for policies that protect the country and the planet from the effects of climate change
Annie Notthoff, who helps California be an environmental policy leader
Lena Brook, who’s getting antibiotics out of our food, one fast-food chain at a time
Barbara Finamore, who started NRDC’s China program
Susan Casey-Lefkowitz, who works toward a clean energy future