Newsletter

The Maryland Utility RELIEF Act cost study draws criticism for bias against wind and solar energy, while supporters say it clarifies costs for ratepayers.

Even as California and Washington state prepare to merge their cap-and-trade climate programs, New York's retreat from creating a similar program has sparked renewed debates about energy costs.
More than half of the detached houses in France are under threat by rising temperatures, spurring the government to fight back.
Drought, low snowpack, and a winter heatwave have left every state in the Western U.S. facing an above-average risk of summer wildfires.

Researchers in Brazil are crossbreeding arabica coffee with rare, more resilient species to help the crop survive rising temperatures, drought and disease.

Major reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change are still on track, but procedural gridlock and a looming funding shortage hint at future problems.

Experts say the US believes it is entitled to resources it desires – a perspective the president has supported for decades.

America's beloved national parks and public lands face conservation rollbacks and sell-offs as the Trump administration pushes for fossil fuel and timber extraction.

Unprecedented legal dodge means the deaths of turtles, whales, manatees, and other imperiled species will be officially excused.

A new children’s book by a Chevron-backed clean energy venture paints a sympathetic portrait of coal, oil, and gas.

From temperature changes to snowmelt, unpredictable weather made it hard to train for the 2026 Labrador Winter Games.

Rising temperatures are increasing the danger of heat-related illness among student athletes, pushing states to adopt new safety rules.

Pollution levels in Iowa's water have been abnormally high this winter, forcing the state's largest city to run an expensive nitrate removal system.

For people who came of age in the 1970s, it is especially painful to witness the Trump administration’s relentless rollback of hard-won environmental progress. But as the assaults on clean air and water, endangered species, and more mount, a noted ecologist finds reasons for hope.
A new analysis found that Europe’s solar capabilities could save the continent €67.5 billion by the end of the year if gas prices remain high.

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has triggered fuel shortages, food disruptions, and a resurgence of coal use, hitting billions of people, especially in poorer countries.

The unprecedented move from a rarely used Endangered Species Committee granted the broadest exemption in the law’s history.

Guardian investigation into reliability of methane certification issued by MiQ reveals the weakness of voluntary model.

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