News

Indigenous women from across the world discuss their struggles against the pollution of their ancestral lands and the ...
Western tribal groups and environmentalists want to defend the recent ban on permitting of new coal mines in the Powder River ...
The abrupt cancellation of a beloved farm-to-school grant program threatens food access, school gardens, and small farms ...
Advocacy groups have pushed regulators to block JBS’ bid, noting its history of corruption charges, illegal deforestation and ...
A new report from the American Lung Association notes a drastic decline in air quality and raises health alarms. Climate ...
Lawyers for the farm lobby said requirements for releasing information and monitoring pollutants had resulted from a “sue and ...
With near drought conditions, state forest fire officials reduced prescribed burns this spring and worried about “quite a ...
Community solar projects are usually on the small side, with capacity of 1 to 5 megawatts. This is in contrast with large ...
Green job training programs are popular across the city, but will there be jobs for the New Yorkers who graduate from them?
Scientists are worried because they can’t fully explain the big jump, but they think it might mean that carbon absorption by forests, fields and wetlands is slowing down—a major problem for the world.
In this topical Q&A, Washington bureau chief Marianne Lavelle and clean energy reporter Dan Gearino field questions from executive editor Vernon Loeb about what it’s like to cover their beats during a ...
Students at five universities rallied to address the ‘“climate crisis” and demand that their schools do more to reduce carbon ...