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Don Brunell

Don Brunell

Business

Broaden the scope of the Snake River salmon review | Brunell

We can’t just focus on part of the problem.

Don Brunell

Business

Water has a greenhouse gas problem | Brunell

Polluted bodies of water, especially rivers and streams, release nearly 4 billion tons of CO2 every year.

Don Brunell

Business

Land is the wild card in Biden’s green gamble |Brunell

It will take a lot of land to covert the U.S. to 100 percent renewable energy.

Don Brunell

Business

Ignoring China’s grip on critical metals production is not an option | Brunell

China processes more than 90 percent of the world’s manganese, while the U.S. has none.

Don Brunell

Business

Building our future electricity supply around hydropower | Brunell

Instead of eliminating fossil-fuel power plants, Washington and New Zealand should work on making those plants fore energy…

Don Brunell

Business

Unemployment insurance intended as a bridge between jobs | Brunell

It shouldn’t be an incentive to stay jobless.

Don Brunell

Business

Rethinking natural gas bans | Brunell

Washington shouldn’t ban natural gas in new homes. Thankfully, Olympia left the bad legislation on the table this…

Don Brunell

Business

North American ports remain closed to large cruise ships | Brunell

Losing out on cruise ship season last year cost Alaska $3 billion.

Don Brunell

Business

Good news from Hanford | Brunell

If Washington is going to reduce CO2 emissions, then it has to go nuclear.

Don Brunell

Business

Keeping America’s semiconductor edge is paramount | Brunell

Semiconductors are among the U.S.’s top five exports.

Don Brunell

Business

TVW is an antidote for dwindling trust in media | Brunell

When you need the unvarnished truth, check out unedited news.

Don Brunell

Business

Austin’s tax incentives and friendliness is working | Brunell

Seattle and Austin have a vastly different approach when it comes to major companies and incentives.

Don Brunell

Business

Removing Snake River dams is unwise | Brunell

From fish to electrical power, removing the dams could be disastrous to Washington.