We hand-package the week’s best Grist stories. Delivered free every Saturday morning.
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A nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.
Renewable electricity standards are not expensive to implement, a new study finds.
Two historians turn to science fiction to scare the hell out of you about climate change.
Remember the hype about the greening of Christianity? Yeah, that, not so much.
The president can't commit to the U.N. Green Climate Fund because Congress won't go along, but he's going to factor climate resilience into international development plans. Hey, it's something.
The largest demonstration in U.S. history was a nuclear disarmament rally in New York in 1982. Today's climate activists are following that lead.
Nearly 1.3 billion people lack access to electricity, but bringing them up to a western level of consumption of fossil fuels will fry the planet. What's the ethical path forward?
Kelp's not only poised to become the next big thing to hit our plates. It's making its way into our brews, too.
At Flood Wall Street, where parade floats doubled as works of art and costumes irked the cops, we saw the power of protest imagery -- and its limitations.
British Columbia's pioneering carbon tax not only reduced climate pollution, but gained popular support as well. Oh, and the naysayers who predicted economic doom? Didn't happen.