Oil and Gas Companies Are Trying to Rig the Marketplace
Fossil fuel interests are spreading misinformation that renewable energy is harmful, unreliable and worse for consumers.
By Andrew Dessler
Fossil fuel interests are spreading misinformation that renewable energy is harmful, unreliable and worse for consumers.
By Andrew Dessler
Currently, the fish are blocked from their most important spawning tributary.
By John Waldman
The data shows that Black Americans are growing increasingly concerned about the effects of climate change, from heat waves to extreme flooding.
By Jerel Ezell
A yawning hole in the Siberian landscape should be a warning about the dangers of extraction.
By Sophie Pinkham
On this impossible, glorious planet, any creature who is tuned for beauty is sure to behold it.
By Margaret Renkl
Electric vehicles shouldn’t be a luxury item, but Biden’s tariffs mean they may remain so.
By Gernot Wagner and Conor Walsh
We need utilities to succeed now more than ever before. But the definition of success needs to evolve.
By Jonathan Mingle
The seasonal allergy hill is now an all-year mountain.
By Margaret Renkl
Instead of continuing the environmental legacy they were once known for, Republicans have ceded the fight against climate change to Democrats.
By Benji Backer
We have become so separate from the natural world that we don’t feel safe in the presence of well maintained trees.
By Margaret Renkl
“Saving the planet” is the wrong goal.
By Craig Foster
To reduce the risk PFAS pose, we need far more comprehensive mandates that test, monitor and limit the entire class of chemicals.
By Kathleen Blackburn
The return of Trump to the White House would be disastrous for the planet.
By Stephen Markley
The nuclear industry has a long history of failing to deliver on its promises.
By Stephanie Cooke
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We need to grapple with the many hidden and little-understood but highly damaging effects of climate change.
By R. Jisung Park
The global community must draw bright lines for combatants in future conflicts by creating specific protections for power grids.
By Peter Fairley
Must grief for the climate diminish you, or can it do the opposite?
By Liz Jensen
Without urgent reforms to how we educate travelers, doctors, nurses and others, we are doomed to miss textbook dengue cases.
By Deborah Heaney
To find the birds, you have to know them.
By Ed Yong
The town of Bombay Beach, Calif., offers its residents a tight-knit community in the midst of catastrophe.
By Jaime Lowe and Nicholas Albrecht
I wish I could take a walk and not see the ugly carelessness.
By Dominique Browning
Geologists just rejected a label for our troubled times. Good.
By Stephen Lezak
A new satellite will show us the full extent of methane emissions. Will we act?
By David Wallace-Wells
High-stakes geoengineering science requires transparency and accountability to the public.
By Jeremy Freeman
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Standard time leads to far more vehicles colliding with deer.
By Laura Prugh
The departing climate envoy on what the world has and hasn’t achieved.
By David Wallace-Wells
We’re entering clima incognita.
By John Vaillant
Do we really want America to become a backwater of bloated, expensive, gas-guzzling cars?
By Robinson Meyer
Flaco’s short life showed that freedom bundled with danger is worth the risk that it may be short and might end badly.
By Carl Safina
Carve the names of climate change deniers deep and large, so that those who come after us need not search the archives.
By Nate Loewentheil
Heat death and cataclysmic storms are only the start of our worries.
By David Wallace-Wells
What the Las Vegas Sphere reveals about the climate crisis.
By Ed Conway
Climate change, ecology and fire suppression have combined to bring us the return of the “urban firestorm.”
By David Wallace-Wells
Cultivated meat offered a delicious fantasy: that we can consume our way out of climate catastrophe.
By Joe Fassler
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A federal judge’s ruling may hold a glimmer of hope for the Mobile-Tensaw Delta.
By Margaret Renkl
Pollution is contributing to Black Americans’ decision to move South, in a trend that is as worrying as it is moving.
By Adam Mahoney
In expanding pockets of the West, citizens across the political spectrum are finding common ground as they adjust to living beside wolves.
By Erica Berry
Information about climate risks is becoming increasingly valuable to companies that want to sell it.
By Justin S. Mankin
The justices should leave it to federal agencies to resolve ambiguities Congress creates when it writes laws those agencies enforce.
By Jody Freeman and Andrew Mergen
To make it through the gathering disquiet, I will need embodied connection.
By Margaret Renkl
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