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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Beacon Power files bankruptcy

Another company funded by the Department of Energy is going bankrupt, but experts still stay that the Solyndra controversy hasn't tainted the solar industry overall.
Posted In: Environment
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With seven billion people comes economic opportunity

According to the United Nations, the global population hit seven billion today. That is a good thing for some countries, and not such a good thing for others.
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Consumer spending up

Consumers spent more than they made in September, cutting into their savings. If government spending drastically shrinks, can we count on consumers for steady spending?
Posted In: Economy
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NASA's big space launch -- of a weather satellite

It may not be a major space shuttle, but the humble satellite could provide invaluable data.
Posted In: Science
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For Niman Ranch, two definitions of 'sustainable'

As companies grow, sustainable business models can come into tension with social and environmental goals.
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Greek customers of U.S. products

Greece is not a major trade partner for the U.S. But there's one California company that has a very specific role in Greece right now.
Posted In: Retail
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The next wave: Re-using wastewater

Water experts are saying that the wastewater industry is more important than ever.
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The end of the road for small towns

One Iowa small town tries to buck the trend and become a destination.
Posted In: Jobs
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Occupy Wall Street protests spread

From humble beginnings to cities across the nation, Occupy Wall Street protests are idiosyncratic and growing.
Posted In: Wall Street
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California desert town banks on solar

Lancaster, Calif., is just one struggling city that's beginning to invest in the sun.

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