Eve Troeh is a reporter on Marketplace’s Sustainability Desk, filing features and breaking stories on how sustainability issues impact business and the economy. Troeh’s reporting can be heard on all Marketplace programs.

Troeh started at Marketplace in 2008 as part of the Marketplace Money production staff. Joining Marketplace’s sustainability desk in 2010, her first major assignment was attending the 2010 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Cancun, Mexico, an experience she called the best, and most rigorous, introduction to global sustainability issues. Troeh also filed stories from the Gulf of Mexico after the BP oil spill. 

Troeh enjoys her work as a radio reporter because it provides the opportunity to go behind the scenes, “Whether it’s a forgotten 19th century steam pipe system, international climate change negotiations, or a free-range hog farm, I get a thrill out of seeing how things work.”

Prior to Marketplace, Troeh worked as a freelance reporter in New Orleans, filing stories for the major public radio programs before and after Hurricane Katrina. She also served as an editor at the public radio music show American Routes.

Troeh holds undergraduate degrees in anthropology and journalism from the University of Southern California, and attended the University of Oslo as a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholar.

Originally from Juneau, Alaska, Troeh grew up in Sainte Genevieve, Missouri and later lived in New Orleans, Louisiana. She is currently located in Los Angeles, where she enjoys exploring the cities’ mountains, markets and neighborhoods.

Features By Eve Troeh

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ReMarket Podcast: How stories progress from night to day

A podcast taking you behind-the-scenes of our favorite stories from the past week: Facebook buying Instagram, hybrid car owners not buying twice and an in-depth look at lobster farming.
Posted In: remarket podcast
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How e-books can move forward after price-fixing lawsuit

The Department of Justice is accusing Apple and five publishers fixing prices for electronic books, or e-books. Three of the publishers have already settled.
Posted In: apple, ebooks, Amazon
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Natural gas prices drop to lowest level in a decade

The price of gasoline is skyrocketing in the U.S. -- so why is natural gas at its lowest price in years?
Posted In: fracking, natural gas
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Chicago mayor hopes to lengthen school day

Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel is moving ahead with controversial plans for a longer school day. That would make Chicago an outlier, because a longer day costs more money -- which most districts don't have at the moment.
Posted In: Rahm Emanuel, School, Chicago
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Apple sued over price fixing on e-books

The Department of Justice is suing Apple. The charges? Price fixing. Not for Apple laptops, or Apple iPads -- but for the e-books you read on them.
Posted In: apple, ebooks
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Instagram could struggle to turn a profit

Facebook is buying the mobile app company Instagram for $1 billion. But when many similar image-based companies have failed to make a profit, will Instagram be any different?
Posted In: instagram, Facebook, mobile apps
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Is Facebook's big Instagram purchase worth it?

Facebook is making its biggest purchase yet as it prepares to go public. The company is buying the photo-sharing app Instagram for a billion dollars.
Posted In: Facebook, instagram, mobile apps, pictures
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Layoffs may not help Sony's bottom line

Sony is reportedly going to cut 10,000 jobs by the end of this year, but some say it may already be too late to save the company.
Posted In: Sony
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Every day is tax time

Taxes are all around, but we may not realize it.
Posted In: Taxes
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AT&T faces worker walkout

Some 40,000 AT&T workers could strike this weekend if contract negotiations fail.
Posted In: AT&T, strike, employees

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