Skip to content
  • Science
  • Politics
  • Justice & Health
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Clean Energy
  • ICN Local
  • Projects
  • About Us
Inside Climate News
Pulitzer Prize-winning, nonpartisan reporting on the biggest crisis facing our planet.
Donate
Trump 2.0: The Reckoning
Inside Climate News
Donate

Search

  • Science
  • Politics
  • Justice & Health
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Clean Energy
  • ICN Local
  • Projects
  • About Us
  • Newsletters
  • ICN Sunday Morning
  • Contact Us

Topics

  • A.I. & Data Centers
  • Activism
  • Arctic
  • Biodiversity & Conservation
  • Business & Finance
  • Climate Law & Liability
  • Climate Treaties
  • Denial & Misinformation
  • Environment & Health
  • Extreme Weather
  • Food & Agriculture
  • Fracking
  • Nuclear
  • Pipelines
  • Plastics
  • Public Lands
  • Regulation
  • Super-Pollutants
  • Water/Drought
  • Wildfires

Information

  • About
  • Job Openings
  • Reporting Network
  • Whistleblowers
  • Memberships
  • Ways to Give
  • Fellows & Fellowships

Publications

  • E-Books
  • Documents

Archives

Western States Brace for a Uranium Boom as the Nation Looks to Recharge its Nuclear Power Industry

By Jake Bolster, Dylan Baddour, Wyatt Myskow

Cattle have been marked for an animal behavior study, showing each cow’s interaction with the solar equipment on Silicon Ranch’s Christiana Solar Farm in Tennessee. Credit: Courtesy of Silicon Ranch

Can Cows and Solar Power Coexist? We’re About to Find Out

By Dan Gearino

What the Whales Are Saying

ICN Sunday Morning

Data centers are energy-intensive, running servers around the clock to power streams of computer computations. Credit: Bastien Ohier/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images

A Company Eyes What Would Be North Carolina’s First Commercial Natural Gas Well

By Lisa Sorg

In Houston, solar panels run down the line to the next manufacturing process at Elin Energy's solar panel manufacturing facility. Credit: Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

Texas Grid Increasingly Meets Growing Demand With Renewables

By Arcelia Martin

Low clouds blanket Mount Rainier National Park in Washington state. Credit: Craig Tuttle/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Ted Bundy, Serial Killers and Lead Exposure: Exploring the Connection Between Neurotoxins and Violence

Interview by Steve Curwood, Living on Earth

CSX train cars after they derailed last Saturday in New Kent County, Virginia, in wetlands 400 feet from the Chickahimony River. The cars spilled diesel fuel and coal. Credit: The James River Assocation

CSX Train Derailment in Virginia Puts Chickahominy River at Risk

By Charles Paullin

A view of Consumers Energy’s J.H. Campbell coal-fired power plant in West Olive, Mich. Credit: Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Trump’s Order to Keep Michigan Coal Plant Running Has Cost $80 Million So Far

By Marianne Lavelle

Utahns and environmentalists gather before Wednesday’s Public Service Commission hearing on PacifiCorp’s 2025 integrated resource plan. Credit: Zack Waterman/Sierra Club

At Rallies in Utah and Wyoming, PacifiCorp Customers Urge the Utility to Pursue Renewables

By Jake Bolster

Una rana de cristal esmeralda posada sobre una hoja en el bosque nuboso de Mindo, en Ecuador. Crédito: Jon G. Fuller/Universal Images Group a través de Getty Images

Los Ecuatorianos Votarán Sobre la Reforma Constitucional, que Podría Acabar con los Derechos de la Naturaleza

Por Katie Surma

A green sea turtle grazes on seagrass in Turks and Caicos. Credit:Teresa Tomassoni/Inside Climate News

After Decades of Protections, Green Sea Turtles Have Been Saved From the Brink of Extinction—for Now

By Teresa Tomassoni

An uncommonly found ghost orchid blooms in the swamp at Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park in Copeland, Fla. Credit: Rhona Wise/AFP via Getty Images

Trump Administration Suggests Listing Florida’s Elusive Ghost Orchid as Endangered

By Amy Green

Transmission lines are seen in Montgomery Village, Md. Credit: Eric Lee/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Maryland Leads Multistate Push to Shield Consumers from New Data Center Costs

By Aman Azhar

People salvage belongings from the rubble of their home on Wednesday after it collapsed during Hurricane Melissa’s passage through Santiago de Cuba. Credit: Yamil Lage/AFP via Getty Images

Climate Change Made Hurricane Melissa Four Times More Likely, Study Suggests

By Kiley Price

The settlement payout compensates customers for expenses in avoiding drinking water tainted with a “forever chemical” in October 2021. Credit: Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images

NJ Residents to Receive $4.9 Million Settlement for PFAS Contamination in Drinking Water

By Jon Hurdle

A view of an Iowa soybean field with corn stubble from the previous year. Credit: Curt Maas/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Can We Produce More Food With Less Land?

By Anika Jane Beamer

Rachel Kutzley demonstrates a thermal camera, a device that can help to identify the leakage of heat, at the Energy Smart Home Expo in Columbus, Ohio, on Oct. 25. Credit: Dan Gearino/Inside Climate News

A Home Energy Fair Offers a Counter Narrative to Cynicism About Climate Change

By Dan Gearino

A construction worker ushers traffic on July 11, 2023, during a record-setting heat wave in Austin, Texas. Credit: Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Growing Threat to Heat-Exposed Workers: Chronic Kidney Disease

By Gina Jiménez, Public Health Watch

Posts pagination

1 2 … 634 Next

Newsletters

We deliver climate news to your inbox like nobody else. Every day or once a week, our original stories and digest of the web's top headlines deliver the full story, for free.

Keep Environmental Journalism Alive

ICN provides award-winning climate coverage free of charge and advertising. We rely on donations from readers like you to keep going.

Donate Now
Inside Climate News
  • Science
  • Politics
  • Justice & Health
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Clean Energy
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Whistleblowers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Charity Navigator
Inside Climate News uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept this policy. Learn More