“Complex landscape structures" on farms could create microclimates with lower temperatures that aid bees, birds, and plants.
Lela Nargi, The Food & Environment Reporting Network
Propelled by government investment and shareholder demand, manufacturers are pushing to get bio-based products into the marketplace. Made from plants, fungi, and microbes, these new materials aim to replace those that contain toxins and are difficult to recycle or reuse.
Jim Robbins, Yale Environment 360
Utilities knew about the dangers of indoor air pollution in 1972 and downplayed them, a DeSmog investigation found.
"There's a lot of history being washed away."
Opponents say the Thacker Pass lithium project was rushed in the name of the green transition.
Sámi land defenders say the windmills must be demolished.
The earth's northernmost regions have entered a vicious cycle of warming and wildfire.
Interstate feuds threaten to make the difficult task of getting regional power grids off fossil fuels even more complicated.
"EPA is finally treating this health crisis for what it is — an emergency."
New research makes clear the link between climate change and prison mortality.
Eighteen U.S. companies’ cargo ships are causing an "onslaught of pollution,” report finds.
The Upper Ohio River Valley has been layered in industrial pollution for centuries, and residents are fed up.
Forest fires, burst pipelines, and chemical waste are just some of the more than 800 instances of environmental degradation recorded since the war began.
The group will focus on permanent removal, distancing itself from "temporary" solutions and traditional offsets.
Despite harsh international criticism, Finland passes on supporting Sámi self-governance.
Even if the Supreme Court rules to protect certain wetlands, the fate of certain watersheds will be up to the states.
“We cannot be sacrificed in the name of the green transition.”
New changes “ended up making the program less focused on people of color than it originally was,” one advocate said.
In the wake of the Ohio train derailment, towns wonder how to avoid same fate.
The coal industry may be dying in the U.S., but its health impacts are not, report finds.