'Dredge-and-fill' created thousands of homes vulnerable to storm surge.
A new report finds Indigenous people in Brazil, Colombia and the Philippines often face the highest rates of violence.
The birds and the bees and the pesticide-covered seeds that kill them.
‘Colossal amount’ of leaked methane, twice initial estimates, is equivalent to third of Denmark’s annual CO2 emissions or 1.3 million cars.
California activists paved the way for defining climate change as an air pollution problem. Now it's federal law.
Cars and highways are among the top contributors to ocean oil pollution, study finds.
The Category 4 storm pushed walls of water several feet high into low-lying cities from Sarasota to Fort Myers.
Polls show left-wing former president Lula ousting incumbent Jair Bolsonaro on October 2.
The initiative will give hard-hit communities $3 billion to address pollution.
Thousands of miles of new pipelines planned around world show ‘an almost deliberate failure to meet climate goals.’
Ever wonder why ads show SUVs dashing through the forest?
The coastal region is severely flood-prone, even with smaller storms.
“Fiona is a storm, and the privatization of the electric grid is a storm as well.“
How a drought-stricken community in India became a “village of millionaires”
The first-of-its-kind plan will purge gas from existing buildings, not just new construction.
Giving workers more of a chance and a choice when extreme weather hits.
As seas rise and storms become more intense, some 40 million Americans living in floodplains are facing greater risk of disaster. Local, state, and federal officials are increasingly looking at managed retreat, or buyouts, as a way to get people out of harm’s way. In this series, Grist profiles three communities at various stages of the buyout process, examining what happens when you ask – or sometimes force – people to leave their homes. What gets lost and who gets left behind?
The nation's largest corn producing region could soon be known as the Extreme Heat Belt.
A new report finds per-acre revenue from offshore wind blows oil and gas out of the water
The bill drew criticism from both sides of the aisle, but it's unclear how it would affect U.S. emissions.