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Climate Change

A dancer practices Bomba, a traditional Puerto Rican dance, at El Batey Puerto Rican Center on July 31 in Buffalo, N.Y. El Batey has a thriving bomba community. Credit: Finya Swai

Buffalo Tests Its Status as a Climate Refuge

By Finya Swai, Erin Drumm

A thick haze blankets New York City as smoke from Canadian wildfires impacts air quality on August 5. Credit: Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images

Smoke From Wildfires Caused by Climate Change Will Fuel Many More Premature Deaths in the U.S., a New Study Warns

By Phil McKenna

The site at Princeton’s Quarry Park that is being prepared for the town’s new microforest. Credit: Courtesy of Inga Reich

Plans Bloom for a Microforest in Princeton as New Jersey Residents Tackle Rising Heat

By Emilie Lounsberry

Cheryl Johnson’s Chicago nonprofit, People for Community Recovery, was part of a coalition that received a $2.8 million grant funded through the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act. The Trump administration canceled it this year after just $32,000 were disbursed. Credit: Zubaer Khan/Chicago Sun-Times

New Map Shows $29 Billion in Climate and Environment Grants Canceled or Frozen by Trump

By Dylan Baddour

Nonprofits working in environmental justice communities like this one, in Pueblo, Colorado, have filed a notice of appeal in federal court in a lawsuit they filed to secure grants provided through the Inflation Reduction Act that the Trump administration rescinded in early 2025. Credit: RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images

Environmentalists and Local Governments Appeal Dismissal of Case Over Trump’s Cancellation of Justice Grants

By Charles Paullin

Madrid’s Emergency Medical Service workers transfer a prisoner from Valdemoro prison to Infanta Elena Hospital after he suffered heat stroke amid a heat wave in Spain. Credit: Pierre-Philippe Marcou/AFP via Getty Images

Human-Caused Warming Tripled the Death Toll of European Heat Waves This Summer, New Report Shows

By Bob Berwyn

Fearing Retaliation, Scientists Are Struggling to Share Impacts of Federal Cuts

By Kiley Price

A Gila monster is seen near Redrock, N.M. Credit: Anthony Pawlicki

Monsters in Trouble

By Tina Deines

People shield themselves from the sun during a heat wave on Aug. 27 in Osaka, Japan. As deadly heat waves kill tens of thousands worldwide annually, the United Nations Environmental Programme has started controversial discussions about concepts to build an atmospheric umbrella for the Earth. Credit: Buddhika Weerasinghe/Getty Images

UN Sessions on Solar Geoengineering Trigger Unease

By Bob Berwyn

Mira Shah, who recently started a student-run climate economics journal, at her father’s office in Dublin, Calif. Credit: Liza Gross/Inside Climate News

California Teen Starts an Online Journal on the Power of Economics to Confront Climate Change

By Liza Gross

An aerial view shows spruce trees of the Canadian boreal forest west of Baie-Comeau, Quebec. Credit: Ed Jonesed Jones/AFP via Getty Images

An Arctic Researcher Explains Yedoma, the Permafrost Keeping the Planet Livable

Interview by Jenni Doering, Living on Earth

Breadfruit grows in Laura, on a lofty tree. The height exposes the tree to the elements, particularly winds that blow off the Pacific Ocean. Credit: Thomas Heaton/Civil Beat/2025

Can This Tree Still Save Us? In Some Places It’s Barely Hanging On

By Thomas Heaton, Honolulu Civil Beat

A child sits on the shoulders of a rescue worker, who is wading through the water near other people. The water is reaching the adults' upper thighs. Buildings rise on either side of them.

Climate Change-Driven Floods Continue to Displace Millions in Pakistan

By Keerti Gopal

A woman sits along with her daughter suffering from dengue fever at Shaheed Suhrawardy Medical College and Hospital on Nov. 4, 2024, in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Credit: Abdul Goni/AFP via Getty Images

Global Warming Is Fueling Dengue Fever Outbreaks

By Anika Jane Beamer

A worker drinks water from a botijo, a Spanish traditional earthenware drinking jug, to fight the heat in the midst of a heat wave in Madrid on Aug. 9, 2023. Credit: Javier Soriano/AFP via Getty Images

World’s Largest Fossil Fuel and Cement Producers Are Responsible for About Half the Intensity of Recent Heat Waves, New Study Shows

By Dana Drugmand

U.S. Bans on Certain Foreign Fish Imports Could Help Conserve Marine Mammals Worldwide, Experts Say

By Kiley Price

Ice researchers say that some of the geoengineering concepts aimed at trying to slow polar ice melt are unaffordable and unrealistic. Credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Geoengineering Won’t Save Us From Global Warming, New Study Says

By Bob Berwyn

Dozens of residents filled the Blount County Commission's boardroom well over capacity on Thursday to oppose the approval of a medical waste treatment facility in Remlap, Alabama. Community members lined the halls outside the meeting. Credit: Lee Hedgepeth/Inside Climate News

As Opposition to an Alabama Medical Waste Treatment Facility Boils Over, a  Mysterious Facebook Page Weighs In

By Lee Hedgepeth

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