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The use of decades-old rainfall estimates do not reflect current – let alone future – climate risk.
Some in the Native Village of Tetlin claim their leaders broke tribal laws when agreeing to the Manh Choh mine.
From Portland to San Antonio, cities have begun to mandate that old buildings be taken apart instead of demolished. How do these ordinances work?
Hundreds of thousands of people remain without drinking water -- and there's no timeline for getting it back.
A French court ruled that the government was responsible for “ecological damage” by failing to meet its goal of cutting emissions by 1.5 percent each year.
The Navajo Tribal Utility Authority planned to electrify thousands of Navajo homes. Then COVID hit.
After 13 lawsuits against the program, the Emergency Relief for Farmers of Color Act is "on thin ice."
A grand jury and the EPA have cited potential disposal problems, and activists are fighting new injection wells. Yet the gas industry claims fracking is essential for the state’s economic health and that most of its wastewater is safely recycled.
Whoever made the mess should pay to clean it up. But who is actually responsible?