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By Amy Green

A Fire Rescue ambulance at Mt. Sinai Medical Center hospital in Miami Beach. A study found that some zip codes in Miami had more than four times the number of emergency room visits and hospitalizations related to heat compared with other neighborhoods, a disparity that correlated somewhat with the distribution of formerly redlined neighborhoods. Credit: Jeffrey Greenberg/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.

In Miami, It’s No Coincidence Marginalized Neighborhoods Are Hotter

By Amy Green

In Pennsylvania, 40 percent of the watersheds that provide water for natural gas fracking contain small streams, according to FracTracker. Credit: Bastiaan Slabbers/NurPhoto via Getty Images.

A Fracker in Pennsylvania Wants to Take 1.5 Million Gallons a Day From a Small, Biodiverse Creek. Should the State Approve a Permit?

By Jake Bolster

A coal-burning energy plant, as seen through cloud cover near Bismarck, North Dakota. Credit: Andrew Burton/Getty Images.

Errors In a Federal Carbon Capture Analysis Are a Warning for Clean Energy Spending, Former Official Says

By Nicholas Kusnetz

In Darrow, Louisiana, Monique Harden of the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice talks to residents about carbon capture at the Hillaryville Pavilion in June. Credit: Emily Kask for the Washington Post via Getty Images.

Q&A: The EPA Dropped a Civil Rights Probe in Louisiana After the State’s AG Countered With a Reverse Discrimination Suit

Interview by Steve Curwood, "Living on Earth"

Parrot Heads crowd Mobile's streets to celebrate the life of Jimmy Buffett. Credit: Lee Hedgepeth/Inside Climate News.

Protecting Margaritaville: Jimmy Buffett, Bama and the Fight to Save the Manatee

By Lee Hedgepeth

Maya Etienne at the Little Calumet River Prairie and Wetlands Nature Preserve, in Gary, IN. on Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2022. Credit: Vincent D. Johnson

Industrial Plants in Gary and Other Environmental Justice Communities Are Highlighted as Top Emitters

By Aydali Campa, Phil McKenna, Victoria St. Martin

A dragonfly on a branch at Lake Asboga in the Sarikamis district of Kars, Turkey, in August 2023. Credit: Huseyin Demirci/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images.

Like Canaries in a Coal Mine, Dragonflies Signal Threats to Freshwater Ecosystems

By Juanita Gordon

Students, teachers and community supporters in Denver held up signs in 2019 as they took part in a protest outside of the Denver Public Schools administration building to demand equity for students attending classes in excessively hot classrooms. Credit: Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post.

What High Heat in the Classroom Is Doing to Millions of American Children

The Texas State Capitol in Austin. Credit: Tamir Kalifa/Getty Images.

As Federal Money Flows to Carbon Capture and Storage, Texas Bets on an Undersea Bonanza

By Amal Ahmed

Replanted trees in the classified forest of Tene near Oumé, in the south western region in Ivory Coast. Tene is the largest reforestation site in the country. Credit: Issouf Sanogo/AFP via Getty Images.

Corporate Nature Restoration Results Murky at Best, Greenwashed at Worst

By Bob Berwyn

A farm in Iowa is surrounded by flood water. Credit: Scott Olson/Getty Images.

As Climate-Fueled Weather Disasters Hit More U.S. Farms, the Costs of Insuring Agriculture Have Skyrocketed

By Georgina Gustin

City of Odessa Water Distribution employees work through the night as they attempt to repair a broken water main Tuesday, June 14, 2022 in Odessa. According to Mayor of Odessa Javier Joven, repairs were completed around 3:45 a.m. Wednesday. Credit: Courtesy Odessa American/Eli Hartman.

Summer of Record Heat Deals Costly Damage to Texas Water Systems

By Dylan Baddour

A natural gas compressor station sits on a hillside in Penn Township, Pennsylvania. Credit: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images.

New Pennsylvania Legislation Aims to Classify ‘Produced Water’ From Fracking as Hazardous Waste

By Jake Bolster

Don Crail, whose home burned down in the Dixie Fire, is rushed into an ambulance for a medical issue in Greenville, California in August 2021. Credit: Josh Edelson/AFP via Getty Images.

A Medical Toolkit for Climate Resiliency Is Built on the Latest Epidemiology and ER Best Practices

By Danish Bajwa

Some large lobsters are still around. Josiah Mayo stands on board Mike Packard’s F/V J&J with a nine-pound lobster in a photo taken two weeks ago. Credit: Mike Packard/Provincetown Independent.

Lobstermen Face Hypoxia in Outer Cape Waters

By Georgia Hall, Provincetown Independent

The prison fence at the Southeast State Correctional Complex in Floyd County, Kentucky, meets a road and open coal seam. Credit: Jill Frank

Q&A: From Coal to Prisons in Eastern Kentucky, and the Struggle for a ‘Just Transition’

By James Bruggers

The Total Culzean platform is pictured on the North Sea, about 45 miles east of the Aberdeen, Europe's self-proclaimed oil capital on Scotland's northeast coast. The oceans absorb about 25 percent of carbon dioxide emissions, and a team of engineers at the University of Pittsburgh has developed new technology to capture carbon dioxide directly from the ocean. Credit: (Andy Buchanan/AFP via Getty Images.

Scientists Find Success With New Direct Ocean Carbon Capture Technology

By Ananya Chetia

Karen Dourdeville photographs a mature female leatherback turtle stranded on Falmouth Beach on Nantucket Sound after being struck by a vessel. Credit: Mass Audubon/Provincetown Independent.

Warmer Waters Put Sea Turtles on a Collision Course With Humans

By Georgia Hall, Provincetown Independent

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