The state's pioneering law could set limits on the industry's profits, and impose fines on those that exceed it.
Models show that currents could slow by more than 40 percent within 30 years, with potentially devastating effects on the ocean's ability to store carbon.
Local communities want to electrify, but gas interests have other ideas.
Nick Bowlin, High Country News
Electric cars are almost nonexistent in Black, Latino, low-income, and rural communities — revealing the enormous task that California faces electrifying the entire fleet.
A new recycling plant in Mexicali raises legal and ethical concerns.
The reports address key challenges and potential solutions for getting these clean energy technologies off the ground.
It convinced the UN to urge the world's highest court to rule on whether polluting nations must address climate change
“This harassment and intimidation is exactly the kind of violence designed to drive us from our homelands.”
Will the legislation help turn agriculture, a climate problem, into a climate solution?
Resolution Copper is one court ruling away from destroying one of the Apaches’ holiest sites.
A new study explores the link between rising temperatures and more deadly tornadoes.
Parter Medical Products was fined more than $800,000 for exposing its workers to dangerously high levels of the carcinogen ethylene oxide.
As subterranean water inches higher, so do threats to air and water.
Experts say the trend still isn’t fast enough to stop the worst impacts of climate change.
Draining the lake allowed agriculture to thrive, but left the region vulnerable to floods.
There have already been 50 chemical spills or fires in the U.S. this year, and it's only March.
Gray wolves, elephants, wildebeests, and sea otters are a few of the species that can help keep global warming below 1.5 degrees C.
Sponsorships, stacked panels, dance parties: Inside utilities' campaign to convince regulators of the bright future for natural gas.
A "staggering volume" of PFAS are being injected into fracked wells.
A proposed hydro project in Kauai — the first of its kind in the world — could supply up to a quarter of the island’s power by diverting 4 billion gallons a year from the Waimea River.
Brittany Lyte, Honolulu Civil Beat