EDF internships provide high-quality experiences (including relevant projects and opportunities for networking) that form the foundation for any individual who is serious about pursuing an environmental career.
Program/Department Overview
EDF’s Economics Team works to advance policies that make market forces work for – rather than against – the environment. Our work is guided by two closely linked missions: program support and thought leadership. We work closely with all of EDF’s programs to ensure our work is based on sound economics and policy design. Through research and analysis, we work to strengthen economics throughout EDF, publish in peer-reviewed journals, and interact with policymakers and other stakeholders to build support for economically sound environmental policies.
Within this team, the Methane Economics group develops quantitative and qualitative analysis of a diverse range of policies and incentives that aim to rapidly reduce global methane emissions. This work focuses primarily on production emissions stemming from the oil and gas sector, which represent a high-impact opportunity to curb an outsized source of near-term atmospheric warming. The Methane Econ group works with diverse experts across EDF to design and advocate for impactful and equitable methane policy at state, national, and international scales.
Overall Function
The Methane Economics Intern will have the opportunity to engage in EDF’s rapidly evolving global methane advocacy space, and to focus deeply on 1-2 topics aligned with the Methane Econ team’s priorities as of Summer 2025. Due to the cross-programmatic and continuously evolving nature of the work, the specific projects that the intern takes on may be adjusted at the start of the internship period, taking into consideration both the team’s highest priority needs during the summer of 2025, and the intern’s interests and background. Project deliverables are expected to relate to one, or a combination, of the following two ongoing workstreams:
1. supporting EDF’s engagement with US and Canadian state lawmakers on the topic of orphaned and idle oil and gas wells;
2. supporting the development of design and implementation criteria for methane emissions intensity standards for natural gas and other fossil fuels.
Specific tasks and deliverables for these workstreams will include contributions to, or leadership of, internal or external policy memos; regulatory comment submissions; blog posts; and/or briefing presentations for EDF staff and partners.
Other specific task requests may arise as the team receives rapid-response policy support requests from across EDF’s Global Methane Initiative; these may include a mixture of literature synthesis, qualitative analysis, and quantitative modeling tasks, to help answer targeted questions at the forefront of EDF’s advocacy on methane in North America, Europe, and/or Asia-Pacific regions.
The intern will report to the Manager, Economics & Policy, but will have opportunities to meet, engage and work with others across the Economics team and EDF’s Global Methane Initiative.
Key Responsibilities
Tasks may include but are not limited to:
Qualifications
Location
U.S. Remote, with option to be hybrid out of an EDF office in Washington, D.C., or Boulder, Colorado. Intern supervisor is in D.C., but some US team members are in Colorado.
Term
Summer 2025 (10 weeks)
Hours
Part-time (20 hrs/week min) or Full-time (35 hrs/week)
Compensation
This internship would involve compensation for work paid at a rate competitive with leading non-profits at $18-20/hr.
Application Materials
Interested applicants should attach their cover letter and resume to the EDF application.
Learn more about internships at EDF -http://www.edf.org/environmental-careers/internships