Newsletter

Scientists say global carbon emissions must drop sharply starting now to avoid dangerous temperature rise, but fossil fuel use continues to surge.

Damian Carrington reports for The Guardian.

Keep reading...Show less

Humanity’s most productive farmlands, including those in the U.S. Midwest, are likely to face sharp declines in food output due to climate change, threatening calorie availability worldwide.

Umair Irfan reports for Vox.

Keep reading...Show less

The Trump administration has proposed reopening vast sections of Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve to oil development, including long-protected areas around Teshekpuk Lake.

Yereth Rosen reports for Alaska Beacon.

Keep reading...Show less

Generative AI systems like chatbots require vastly different amounts of energy to run, with the largest models emitting significantly more carbon despite offering limited gains in accuracy, new research shows.

Sachi Kitajima Mulkey reports for The New York Times.

Keep reading...Show less

Heatwaves, mold growth, and plastic waste are becoming costly threats to companies and insurers, driven by fossil fuel use and worsening climate impacts, according to a new risk assessment from Swiss Re.

Justine Calma reports for The Verge.

Keep reading...Show less

Workers and labor advocates are pushing the federal government to adopt national protections against extreme heat as rising temperatures continue to cause deaths and injuries on job sites across the United States.

Liza Gross reports for Inside Climate News.

Keep reading...Show less

Brazil’s largest carbon credit deal is under fire as federal prosecutors move to annul a $180 million agreement, citing violations of national law and the rights of traditional communities in the Amazon.

Carla Ruas reports for Mongabay.

Keep reading...Show less

The world’s largest banks poured $869 billion into fossil fuel companies in 2024, up sharply from the year before, despite public commitments to fight climate change.

Georgina Gustin reports for Inside Climate News.

Keep reading...Show less

Texas officials are asking voters to approve a $1 billion-per-year initiative to fund water projects as the state faces mounting pressure from drought, aging infrastructure, and rapid population growth.

Brady Dennis reports for The Washington Post.

Keep reading...Show less

Wildfire smoke is pushing people indoors across Oregon and Washington, where researchers say the shift in behavior may be accelerating the spread of fast-moving infectious diseases like COVID-19 and the flu.

Sharon Udasin reports for The Hill.

Keep reading...Show less

The United States skipped a major round of United Nations climate negotiations in Bonn, Germany this week, leaving other nations and U.S. civil society groups to navigate the talks without the world's largest fossil fuel producer at the table.

Bob Berwyn reports for Inside Climate News.

Keep reading...Show less

A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration from canceling $600 million in environmental justice grants aimed at helping underserved communities reduce pollution.

Rachel Frazin reports forThe Hill.

In short:

  • The grants stem from the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, which set aside $3 billion for environmental justice programs.
  • The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under President Biden had planned to distribute the $600 million through regional groups, which would fund local efforts, before the Trump EPA terminated the grants earlier this year.
  • Judge Adam Abelson ruled the EPA's cancellation exceeded its authority “precisely because they are ‘environmental justice’ programs."

Key quote:
The move included a “lack of any reasoned decision-making, or reasoned explanation.”

— Judge Adam Abelson, U.S. District Court

Why this matters:
Underserved communities often face the greatest environmental health risks and climate impacts. These grants were designed to help local groups respond to long-standing environmental harms and health risks, and canceling them would have cut off vital support just as cleanup efforts were beginning to gain traction. The Trump administration has also attempted to cancel a similar $20 billion program that would fund climate-friendly projects.

Congressional Republicans are advancing a tax plan that would slash incentives for clean energy and electric vehicles, drawing criticism from advocates and some GOP members whose districts benefit from green investments.

Alexa St. John reports for The Associated Press.

Keep reading...Show less

Brazil is set to auction off oil and gas exploration rights in a massive offshore and Amazon region sale, prompting backlash from Indigenous groups and environmental advocates just months before it hosts the Cop30 climate summit.

Constance Malleret reports for The Guardian.

Keep reading...Show less

The number of extreme summer weather events driven by trapped atmospheric waves has tripled since 1950 due to climate change, new research shows.

Seth Borenstein reports for The Associated Press.

Keep reading...Show less

Industrial agriculture companies spent hundreds of millions lobbying Congress ahead of the stalled farm bill debate, further distancing everyday Americans from decisions shaping the nation’s food systems and climate future.

Brian Calvert reports for Civil Eats.

Keep reading...Show less

Cleveland-Cliffs is scaling back plans to build the nation's first green steel plant in Ohio, pivoting away from hydrogen and back to fossil fuels as federal incentives face repeal and political winds change in Washington.

Alexander C. Kaufman reports for Canary Media.

Keep reading...Show less

In California’s Mojave Desert, a mining plant is turning to solar thermal energy to replace one of its coal-fired generators, but a second unit may run for years due to the intense heat and 24-hour power it needs.

Ivan Penn reports for The New York Times.

In short:

  • Searles Valley Minerals, a mining company in Trona, Calif., is replacing one of its two coal plants with a solar thermal system but says the other may need to stay online for the foreseeable future due to operational demands.
  • The company will use a concentrating solar power system from start-up GlassPoint, which uses mirrors to generate high heat, a solution that works well in hot, sunny areas but requires a large land footprint and remains rare in the U.S.
  • Despite California’s push to phase out coal and President Trump’s efforts to revive it, economic and geographic constraints continue to complicate full industrial transitions away from fossil fuels.

Key quote:

“We just think coal is going to be a problem. We’re going to have a hard time sourcing it. We need to be ready to pivot.”

— Dennis Cruise, president of Searles Valley Minerals

Why this matters:

Industrial heat — the kind used in mining, chemical production, and heavy manufacturing — accounts for about half of global energy use, yet it’s rarely mentioned in public climate debates. Unlike home heating or car travel, generating this level of heat without fossil fuels is still tough. Most renewable energy technologies don’t deliver the extreme, continuous heat these facilities need. That leaves industries like the one in Trona stuck with coal, even as it becomes harder to source and politically unpopular. As the U.S. attempts to decarbonize, industrial energy needs present one of the biggest hurdles.

Related: Farmers use solar panels to protect crops and conserve water

FOLLOW US:
SUBSCRIBE:
Journalism that drives the discussion
Copyright © 2017 Environmental Health Sciences. All rights reserved.