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The latest draft report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change centers on a really scary word: irreversible.
Now that Californians can get fined $500-a-day for overwatering their lawns, businesses that paint lawns green are expanding.
Still missing the connection between the fight for the planet and the movement that has grown out of the killing of Michael Brown and Eric Garner? Let us explain.
On Oct. 1, Massachusetts institutions producing more than a ton of leftovers a week must donate the scraps instead of dumping them.
You'd think insurance firms have a strong financial incentive to get ahead of climate change-induced trouble. Think again, says a new report.
After calls for voluntary conservation didn't work, the drought-stricken state is cracking down on profligate water use.
A new documentary about veterans turned farmers finds that working the soil can be an antidote to the hardships of re-entry.
Organic farmer Paul Hain wants to ban fracking in San Benito County, Calif. A local ballot initiative may help him get his wish.
Now back to work after a sabbatical, Grist blogger David Roberts reflects on digital overload, work-life balance, and other good stuff.