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By James Bruggers

The site of the formerly proposed Encina chemical recycling plant for plastic waste in Point Township, Penn. Credit: James Bruggers/Inside Climate News

A Giant Plastics Chemical Recycling Plant Planned for Pennsylvania Died After Two Years. What Happened?

By James Bruggers

A newly revealed research proposal from 1971 shows that Richard Nixon’s science advisors embarked on an extensive analysis of the potential risks of climate change. Credit: Oliver Atkins/National Archives

Nixon Advisers’ Climate Research Plan: Another Lost Chance on the Road to Crisis

By Marianne Lavelle

During a demonstration at Citibank’s headquarters in Manhattan on Wednesday, 33 protesters were taken into custody, including Rachel Rivera (center), a board member with New York Communities for Change. Credit: Keerti Gopal/Inside Climate News

Dozens of Climate Activists Arrested at Citibank Headquarters in New York City During Earth Week

By Keerti Gopal

Craig Station, one of Colorados largest coal-fired power plants, is exempted from the new rules since it’s expected to fully close by 2028. Credit: Hyoung Chang/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images

Power Plant Pollution Targeted in Sweeping Actions by Biden Administration

By Marianne Lavelle

An aerial view of the Tesla Fremont Factory in California on April 24. Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Tesla Fell Behind, Then Leapt Ahead of ExxonMobil in Market Value This Week

By Dan Gearino

Clara Riley stands among her relatives and neighbors in her Oak Grove home. Credit: Lee Hedgepeth/Inside Climate News

Alabama Coal Mine Keeps Digging Under A Rural Community After Hundreds of Fines and a Fatal Explosion. Residents Are Rattled

By Lee Hedgepeth, James Bruggers

Haida hereditary chief Gidansda (Guujaaw) leads a group of paddlers aboard Luu Taas (“Wave Eater”), a 15-meter red-cedar canoe designed by acclaimed Haida artist Bill Reid for the 1986 World Exposition on Transportation and Communication held in Vancouver, British Columbia. Carving and paddling cedar canoes is one example of how Haida people are inextricably linked to both land and sea. Credit: Courtesy of Guujaaw

In Coastal British Columbia, the Haida Get Their Land Back

By Serena Renner, Hakai Magazine

Former Vice President Al Gore presents the Climate TRACE global greenhouse gases emissions database during COP28 in Dubai. Credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

‘Pathetic, Really, and Dangerous’: Al Gore Reflects on Fraudulent Fossil Fuel Claims, Climate Voters and Clean Energy

By Kristoffer Tigue

Jack Bonner and Dakotah Pinkus, technicians for Colorado Parks and Wildlife, transfer trout fry that will be dropped into a lake in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains during an assisted migration in 2022. The Rio Grande cutthroat trout were transferred to a watershed cooler than its’ typical range to account for climate change. Credit: Luna Anna Archey/High Country News

The Recovering America’s Wildlife Act Is Still a Bipartisan Unicorn

By Erin X. Wong, High Country News

One World Trade Center in New York City is obscured amid poor air quality due to smoke from Canadian wildfires as planes sit on the tarmac at Newark Liberty International Airport on June 8, 2023 in New Jersey. Credit: Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images

More Than a Third of All Americans Live in Communities with ‘Hazardous’ Air, Lung Association Finds

By Victoria St. Martin

In ‘The People vs. Citi,’ Climate Leaders Demand Citibank End Its Fossil Fuel Financing

By Keerti Gopal

GRID Alternatives is a leading recipient of grants from the federal Solar for All program announced on Monday. The organization installs solar systems, primarily for low-income households, as shown in this October 2023 install in Colorado. Credit: GRID Alternatives

IRA’s Solar for All Program Will Install Nearly 1 Million Systems in US

By Dan Gearino

American Creosote Works, three blocks north of Pensacola Bay, is a former wood treatment plant turned Superfund site. Credit: Dan Anderson

EPA Faulted for Wasting Millions, Failing to Prevent Spread of Superfund Site Contamination

By Katie Surma

Members of the Northern Arapaho Tribe host a local tribal powwow on the eve of a solar eclipse in Riverton, Wyo. on August 20, 2017. Credit: Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post via Getty Images

In Wyoming, a Tribe and a City Pursue Clean Energy Funds Spurned by the Governor

By Jake Bolster

Flamingos fly over the Nartë lagoon, near the city of Vlorë, Albania. Credit: Gent Shkullaku/AFP via Getty Images

Jared Kushner Has Big Plans for Delta of Europe’s Last Wild River

By Fred Pearce, Yale Environment 360

At Raccoon Point, in the Big Cypress National Preserve, oil was detected in 1978. Production began in 1981, and the field was expanded in 1992. Credit: National Parks Conservation Association/LightHawk

Oil Drilling Has Endured in the Everglades for Decades. Now, the Miccosukee Tribe Has a Plan to Stop It

By Amy Green

Denise Moreno Ramírez, Ph.D, talks to Dr. Jackie Maximillian about her research poster at the University of Arizona’s Earth Week SWESx Student Showcase where she won second place for her poster presentation in March of 2017. Credit: Courtesy photo

How an Arizona Medical Anthropologist Uses Oral Histories to Add Depth to Environmental Science

By Emma Peterson

The team of researchers studied this field site location of the Austrian Alps in August 2018. Credit: Arthur Broadbent

Reduced Snow Cover and Shifting Vegetation Are Disrupting Alpine Ecosystems, Study Finds

By Moriah McDonald

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