Latest Articles
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Scientists are baffled by a giant spike in this greenhouse gas (it’s not CO2)
Whoever smelt it dealt it, right?
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There are glimmers of a Green New Deal in Inslee’s big new climate plan
The little-known governor of Washington state just unveiled the ambitious second phase of his climate plan, and there are more pieces of the puzzle to come.
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New York’s Williams Pipeline is denied (but not dead)
New York denied the pipeline a permit it needed to begin construction. But the company plans to reapply.
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Houston teen: Why my oil-soaked city could be ground zero for a greener future
I've seen floods and toxic fires, but I see a brighter future — and young people who are willing to fight for it.
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Puerto Rico got rid of its coal ash pits. Now the company responsible is moving them to Florida.
Thousands of tons of coal ash from Puerto Rico are headed for a new home: a Florida county with one of the fastest-growing Puerto Rican populations in the U.S.
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Bureau of Land Management scrubs stewardship language from news releases
“In [President Trump and Interior Secretary David Bernhardt's] world, our lands are only here for exploitation and financial gain, not protection and preservation.”
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How do I explore the woods without ruining them?
You love to be in the woods, but you don’t feel like you belong there.
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The plastic industry is on track to produce as many emissions as 600 coal-fired power plants
The global plastic industry is on track to produce enough emissions to put the world on track for a catastrophic warming scenario.
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In the warming Arctic, a promising solution to climate change
On a quest to stop, and even reverse, climate change, one inventor has taken the fight to the place that is feeling it most.
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Carbon dioxide levels just hit 415 ppm. Who saw this coming? Exxon Mobil.
While the rest of the world is reeling from the newest greenhouse gas emissions data, Exxon Mobil projections from almost 40 years ago have accurately predicted these levels.