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Fossil Fuels

Holding industries that profit from greenhouse gas emissions accountable for actions that hinder solutions to the climate crisis their products are responsible for causing. 

A lignite-fueled power plant is seen in Stanton, North Dakota, where air pollution in the state could be 13 percent higher in 2035 compared to what they would be under current policy. Credit: Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Study Says Clean Energy Rollbacks Will Cost Economy $1.1 Trillion by 2035

By Marianne Lavelle

The Hays Energy Project, a 990 MW gas-fired power plant near San Marcos, is seen on May 27. Credit: Dylan Baddour/Inside Climate News

Developers Propose More Than 100 New Gas Power Plants in Texas

By Dylan Baddour

American Cast Iron Pipe (ACIPCO) was founded in Birmingham in 1905 and employs approximately 1,600 people at its Birmingham facilities. Credit: Dennis Pillion/Inside Climate News

Canceled Climate Grants Would Have Cut Pollution While Boosting Production, Jobs at Two Alabama Ironworks

By Dennis Pillion

An emergency order last week blocked the retirement of the coal-fired J.H. Campbell Complex in Michigan. Credit: Consumers Energy

Trump Hastens ‘Drumbeat’ of Deferred Coal Plant Retirements

By Marianne Lavelle, Carrie Klein

In Vancouver, Washington, Everett Clayton looks at a digital thermometer on a nearby building that reads 116 degrees while walking to his apartment on June 27, 2021. Credit: Nathan Howard/Getty Images

The Estate of a Woman Who Died in the 2021 Pacific Northwest Heat Dome Sues Big Oil for Wrongful Death

By Dana Drugmand

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum speaks to miner's inside Warrior Met's Mine No. 4, in April in Berry, Alabama. Credit: Department of the Interior

Sinking Homes, Climate Damage, Explosion Risks: New Government Review Outlines the Costs of One Mine Expansion

By Lee Hedgepeth

Sisters Abigail and Jennifer Lindsey stand on their rural property on May 27 outside New Braunfels, Texas, where they posted a sign in opposition to a large data center and power plant planned across the street. Credit: Dylan Baddour/Inside Climate News

Data Centers Are Building Their Own Gas Power Plants in Texas

By Dylan Baddour, Arcelia Martin

Firefighters with the New York City Fire Department investigate a possible natural gas leak at an apartment building in Brooklyn on July 14, 2020. Credit: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

Gas Leaks Can Have Significant Spillover Impacts on Neighboring States, Study Finds

By Lauren Dalban

The Eddystone Generating Station near Philadelphia. Credit: Constellation Energy

Aging Pennsylvania Power Plant to Keep Running After Trump Order on Eve of Shutdown

By Jon Hurdle

Evaporation ponds hold produced water amid the oil wells of the Permian Basin in Loco Hills, N.M. Credit: Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

New Mexico Bans Release of Treated Oil and Gas Wastewater

By Carrie Klein

A small compressor station for an LNG pipeline is seen in Spanish Valley near Moab, Utah. Credit: Jon G. Fuller/VW Pics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The Massive Pipeline Buildout in the U.S. Is Mostly for Gas Going Overseas

By Phil McKenna

President Donald Trump tours U.S. Steel’s Irvin Works in West Mifflin, Pa., on Friday. Credit: Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

U.S. Steel Is a Major Source of Pollution in Pennsylvania. Will Its Sale Lock in Emissions for Another Generation?

By Kiley Bense

A view of a crude oil shipping terminal, where oil is transferred from tanker trucks to rail tank cars, near Wellington, Utah. Credit: Jon G. Fuller/VW Pics/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Supreme Court Backs a Controversial Railroad in Utah for Carrying Oil

By Lisa Sorg

A view of Big Sewickley Creek downstream from PennEnergy’s proposed water withdrawal site shows erosion control (center) and a portion of the project workspace and parking area (gravel and log on right). Credit: Rose Reilly/Big Sewickley Creek Watershed Association

Pennsylvania Fracking Company Surrenders Water Permits Over Concerns About Stream Flow

By Jon Hurdle

Peruvian farmer Saúl Luciano Lliuya is seen on a laptop during a statement for media on Wednesday after the Higher Regional Court ruling in Hamm, Germany. Credit: Ina Fassbender/AFP via Getty Images

German Court Rejects Peruvian’s Claim of Climate Harms

By Bob Berwyn

A view of Station 155, one of Transco’s several compressor stations along the Southeast Supply Enhancement Project pipeline route, in a residential neighborhood of Lexington, N.C. Credit: Lisa Sorg/Inside Climate News

A Transco Pipeline Plan to Boost Gas in Five States Would Sharply Increase Air Pollution in N.C. Towns

By Lisa Sorg

The Maryland Office of People’s Counsel first filed a complaint against Washington Gas in 2021. Credit: Stuart Cahill/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images

Maryland Advocates Call for Penalties on Washington Gas After Ruling on False Environmental Claims

By Aman Azhar

A worker checks solar panels at the Benban Solar Energy Park in Aswan, Egypt, on April 21, 2024. A consortium of Chinese investors helped finance the solar park in 2021 as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative. Credit: Ahmed Gomaa/Xinhua via Getty Images

For the First Time, China Invests More in Wind and Solar Than Coal Overseas

By Katie Surma, Georgina Gustin, Nicholas Kusnetz

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