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By Phil McKenna

Pipes for a geothermal heating system are dug into the ground using an excavator. Credit: MyLoupe/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

A Little-Known Clean Energy Solution Could Soon Reach ‘Liftoff’

By Phil McKenna

A pedestrian walks across a flooded street in Honolulu on Dec. 7, 2021, the morning after a powerful tropical storm known as a Kona Low hit the Hawaii islands. Credit: Eugene Tanner/AFP via Getty Images

The Supreme Court Let Lawsuits Against Oil Companies Proceed. This Is What It Means

Interview by Aynsley O’Neill, Living on Earth

People do chores near the Rancheria River, which runs adjacent to the Cerrejon coal mine in Colombia. The Swiss mining giant Glencore has filed multiple ISDS claims against Colombia related to its investment in the mine. Credit: Lis Mary Machado/Anadolu via Getty Images

Biden Administration Reaches Deal Limiting Controversial Protections for Multinational Corporations

By Katie Surma, Nicholas Kusnetz

Smoke and flames overwhelm the Altadena area of Los Angeles County during the Eaton Fire on Jan. 8. Credit: Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty Images

Smoke and Ash Made More Toxic by the Contents of Burning Homes Threaten Residents of LA and Beyond

By Audrey Gray and Andrew Robinson

Fish and sharks swim around North Seymour Island in Ecuador’s Galapagos Islands on March 8, 2024. Credit: Ernesto Benavides/AFP via Getty Images

A Court Says Coastal Marine Ecosystems Have Intrinsic Value—and Legal Rights

By Katie Surma

A house is seen near the Gavin Power Plant in Cheshire, Ohio. Credit: Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

Has Trump Changed the Retirement Plans for the Country’s Largest Coal Plants?

By Dan Gearino

A firefighter monitors the spread of a wildfire on Jan. 13 in Oxnard, Calif. Credit: Etienne Laurent/AFP via Getty Images

‘Virtually Any City on Earth Can Burn Now’

By Kiley Bense

A Florida manatee swims at the Three Sisters Springs wildlife refuge in Crystal River, Fla. Credit: Dave Fleetham/Design Pics Editorial via Getty Images

Florida Manatees Retain Threatened Status Under New Federal Proposal, Despite Outcry for Greater Protection

By Amy Green

Sandra Edwards, who lives in Houston’s Fifth Ward, is still trying to recover from Hurricane Beryl, which badly damaged her home last July. “The government doesn’t care about us,” she says. Credit: Mark Felix/Public Health Watch

Texas Is Unprepared for Compound Climate Disasters

By Jana Cholakovska, Public Health Watch

A view of the cogeneration plant operated by the University of North Carolina, located a half-mile from the UNC-Chapel Hill campus. Credit: Lisa Sorg/Inside Climate News

To Reduce its Carbon Footprint, UNC Could Burn Pellets Composed of Paper and Plastic

By Lisa Sorg

Commercial fishermen prepare to check their nets on Lake Superior in Bayfield, Wisconsin, on Feb. 23, 2021. Credit: Scott Olson/Getty Images

How Climate Change Is Complicating a Beloved Midwest Pastime: Ice Fishing

By Kristoffer Tigue

A contractor visits Amparo Vigil's building in San Francisco's outer Mission District in September 2024 before putting in a bid to work on a solar panel installation and the transition to electric heat pumps and other appliances. Credit: Twilight Greenaway/Inside Climate News

Building Decarbonization Could Push Out Low-Income Renters. A San Francisco Program Hopes to Prevent That

By Twilight Greenaway

Albuquerque resident Annie Frang was struck by a car riding home from work in August 2024. She suffered a separated shoulder from the incident. Credit: Tina Deines/Inside Climate News

Wheels Are Turning to Make Albuquerque Streets Less Threatening to Bicycle Commuters

By Tina Deines

Heavy-duty trucks travel through a neighborhood in Houston. Credit: Mayra Beltran/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

Advocates Warn of Climate, Cancer Risks From a Potential Trump Rollback on Electric Big Rigs and Buses

By Kyle Bagenstose

Speaker of the House Adrienne A. Jones introduces Lieutenant Gov. Aruna Miller and Gov. Wes Moore as Maryland lawmakers convene for a new legislative session on Jan. 8 in Annapolis. Credit: Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Maryland’s Climate Goals Under Strain as Budget Gaps and Looming Federal Cuts Threaten Progress

By Aman Azhar

Sandhill cranes fly in for the night at the Woodbridge Ecological Reserve in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, one of their favorite roosting spots in California’s Central Valley. Credit: Liza Gross/Inside Climate News

California Rice Fields Offer Threatened Migratory Waterbirds a Lifeline

By Liza Gross

Rusted barrels and cracked concrete are all that remain of the former Glidden Paint Plant in Reading, Pa. State funding has been allocated to remediate the site prior to a planned redevelopment. Credit: Daniel Propp/Inside Climate News

How North America’s Leading Brownfield Redeveloper Makes Millions by Not Redeveloping Brownfields

By Daniel Propp

A humpback whale lunges out of the water while feeding on krill in the Gerlache Strait in the Western Antarctic Peninsula. Credit: Ryan Reisinger

Scientists Call for More Marine Protected Areas in the Southern Ocean

By Teresa Tomassoni

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