News

Chicago residents risk daily lead exposure from toxic pipes. Replacing them will take decades. The city with the most lead service lines in the country doesn’t plan to finish replacing them until 2076 ...
Thousands of people “are falling through the cracks" because they can't make repairs to qualify for the Weatherization Assistance Program.
What started out as a necessity during the pandemic has really evolved into an incredible place that brings people together." ...
As the market for floatovoltaics explodes, scientists are studying how to make the systems also work for waterbirds and other ...
Rice feeds more than half of the world’s population. Climate change is loading the beloved grain with arsenic, creating a “scary” health burden.
UNESCO appoints Indigenous co-chairs to protect languages and knowledge amid climate crisis "A single word like 'X̱maay' contains generations of climate knowledge, laws, and cultural practices." ...
When you outlaw or discourage the sale of plastic bags, fewer of them end up as litter on beaches.
Inside the grassroots opposition that fended off a 2,200-acre data center campus in southern Virginia, and why their struggle ...
California remains committed to zero-emissions trucking. But Trump's hostility to the idea means it will require creative ...
In the high glare of a summer evening in Fairbanks, Alaska, Ciara Santiago watched the mercury climb. A meteorologist at the ...
Even in the U.S., where the policy was least popular, half of those surveyed said they'd support a climate tax that ...
A new book traces how the American prairie was nearly destroyed and why its return is so necessary for our future.