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Living and breathing on the front line of a toxic chemical zone
As the Biden administration moves to curb health threats caused by toxic chemicals, the debate hits home for families living near petrochemical plants.
Photo by Brent Pace on Unsplash
Terry Tempest Williams: I am haunted by what I have seen at Great Salt Lake
Evaporation from heat and drought accelerated by climate change, combined with overuse of the rivers that feed it, have shrunk the lake’s area by two-thirds.
Bureau of Reclamation/Flickr
Dale Maharidge: The Colorado River is running dry, but nobody wants to talk about the mud
It’s time to drill holes in Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River and empty Lake Powell.
Newsletter
Ecuador moves to expand drilling in the Amazon
A novel idea to leave the country’s vast oil reserves in the ground fizzled for lack of international support. Now, struggling under painful debt, the government wants to expand drilling in the rainforest.
Germans turn to heat pumps to replace gas furnaces
The boxy machines look and function like large air-conditioners on reverse, but Germans hope they hold the key to Europe’s push for fossil-free heating.
Trapped between extremists and extreme weather, Somalis brace for famine
The worst drought in 40 years is pushing Somalia to the brink. If it triggers a rare famine declaration, the militant group Al Shabab will also be to blame.
Newsletter
www.nytimes.com
‘This noise that never stops’: Wind farms come to Brazil’s Atlantic coast
In Brazil, the world’s eighth-largest producer of wind power, the wind industry brings both benefits and disappointment.
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