2023
As Drought Grips the Southwest, Water Utilities Find the Hunt For More Workers Challenging
By Wyatt Myskow
Watchdog Finds a US Chemical Plant Isn’t Reporting Emissions of Climate Super-Pollutants and Ozone-Depleting Substances to Federal Regulators
By Phil McKenna
A Frequent Culprit, China Is Also an Easy Scapegoat
By Ian Urbina
Q&A: After its Hottest Summer On Record, Phoenix’s Mayor Outlines the City’s Future
By Wyatt Myskow
Answers About Old Gas Sites Repurposed as Injection Wells for Fracking’s Toxic Wastewater May Never Be Fully Unearthed
By Jake Bolster
In New Zealand, Increasingly Severe Crackdowns on Environmental Protesters Fail to Deter Climate Activists
By Emma Ricketts
Q&A: America’s 20-Year War in Afghanistan Is Over, but Some of the U.S. Military’s Waste May Last Forever
Interview by Jenni Doering, “Living on Earth”
Biden Announces Huge Hydrogen Investment. How Much Will It Help The Climate?
By Nicholas Kusnetz, Jon Hurdle
Texas Quietly Moves to Formalize Acceptable Cancer Risk From Industrial Air Pollution. Public Health Officials Say it’s not Strict Enough.
By Dylan Baddour
As Alabama Judge Orders a Takeover of a Failing Water System, Frustrated Residents Demand Federal Intervention
By Lee Hedgepeth
A Reality Check About Solar Panel Waste and the Effects on Human Health
By Dan Gearino
Fish and Wildlife Service to Consider Restoring Manatee’s Endangered Status
By Amy Green
Scientists Disagree About Drivers of September’s Global Temperature Spike, but It Has Most of Them Worried
By Bob Berwyn
A Rural Pennsylvania Community Goes to Commonwealth Court, Trying to Stop a New Disposal Well for Toxic Fracking Wastewater
By Jake Bolster
Vessel Strikes on Whales Are Increasing With Warming. Can the Shipping Industry Slow Down to Spare Them?
By Kiley Price
Making Solar Energy as Clean as Can Be Means Fitting Square Panels Into the Circular Economy
By Emma Peterson, Wyatt Myskow