A new study found significant associations between both long- and short-term exposure to environmental heat during a pregnancy and severe maternal morbidity.
The 600-mile wide storm has weakened, but its impacts in Massachusetts, Maine, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia are expected to be severe.
For the first time, clean energy tax credits are transferable, and the market for them is surging.
Political unrest and crumbling infrastructure were also factors in the disaster.
An idea from the past could provide a way to cope with extreme heat.
Car shares not only make EVs more equitable, they reduce the number of vehicles on the road and the resources needed to decarbonize transport.
The federal disaster relief agency has taken heat for steering past resilience funds to whiter, wealthier areas.
A new report finds that Indigenous peoples made up more than a third of those deaths.
Data reveals the division of tree cover along racial and income lines in cities — and can also help them fix it.
As federal agencies prepare to deregulate transgenic chestnuts, Indigenous nations are asserting their rights to access and care for them.
People laboring in brutal temperatures want OSHA to investigate conditions that leave them vulnerable to heat illness and exhaustion.
Contamination from battery recyclers, tainted cookware, and fertilizers could be contributing to the health crisis.
Agricultural emissions would fall by almost a third. But getting there wouldn't be easy.
A successfully re-routed Southwestern transmission line shows its possible to overcome green energy obstacles.
With scorching temperatures, are we losing our ability to have fun in the sun?
The Black Sea is almost devoid of oxygen. That could make it a great place to stash carbon.
The water in these four unincorporated communities near Lubbock has been undrinkable for years, residents say. They hope to win $3 million in state grants to improve their systems.
Pooja Salhotra, The Texas Tribune
And there are still four months to go.
Plastic credits can help fund waste cleanup, but they can also justify making more plastic.
A new study shows disaster restoration workers, mostly refugees and immigrants, are poorly protected as top firms "pad their pockets by cutting costs."
Nina Lakhani, The Guardian