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Climate Change

Inside Clean Energy: Batteries Got Cheaper in 2021. So How Close Are We to EVs That Cost Less than Gasoline Vehicles?

By Dan Gearino

National Ignition Facility Site Manager Vaughn Draggoo walks the length of one the laser bays inside the facility at Lawrence Livermore National Lab on Thursday, May 4, 2000. Credit: Jim Ketsdever/MediaNews Group/Contra Costa Times via Getty Images

Nuclear Fusion: Why the Race to Harness the Power of the Sun Just Sped Up

By Tom Wilson in Oxford and Ian Bott in London, Financial Times

A Plea to Make Widespread Environmental Damage an International Crime Takes Center Stage at The Hague

By Katie Surma

Guillermo Fernandez holds a sign reading "Hunger strike for the climate for our children" during his hunger strike next to the Swiss House of Parliament in Bern on November 28, 2021. Fernandez wants to force to Federal Assembly to gather for a mandatory training session on the climate and ecological emergency. Credit: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images

Scientists Join Swiss Hunger Strike to Raise Climate Alarm

By Bob Berwyn

A large fracking operation becomes a new part of the horizon with Mount Meeker and Longs Peak looming in the background on December 28, 2017 in Loveland, Colorado. Credit: Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post via Getty Images

Biden Promised to Stop Oil Drilling on Public Lands. Is His Failure to Do So a Betrayal or a Smart Political Move?

By Marianne Lavelle

A Life’s Work Bearing Witness to Humanity’s Impact on the Planet

A workers at Holiday Tree Farms tags freshly harvested Christmas trees at the Beaver Creek shipping yard on Nov. 18, 2017 in Philomath, Oregon. Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Warming Trends: Swiping Right and Left for the Planet, Education as Climate Solution and Why It Might Be Hard to Find a Christmas Tree

By Katelyn Weisbrod

View from the observation tower of rising mist from the rain forest canopy in the rain forest near La Selva Lodge near Coca, Ecuador. Credit: Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images

Ecuador’s High Court Affirms Constitutional Protections for the Rights of Nature in a Landmark Decision

By Katie Surma

A local elementary school is just down the street from the superfund site and Grand Prairie’s water tower. Credit: Keren Carrion

The EPA Placed a Texas Superfund Site on its National Priorities List in 2018. Why Is the Health Threat Still Unknown?

By Alejandra Martinez, KERA

This compressed air energy storage plant in Goderich, Ontario, is one of the two small plants built by Hydrostor ahead of its current proposals to build much larger plants in California. The Goderich plant, completed in 2019, can discharge 1.75 megawatts for about six hours before needing to be recharged. Photo Courtesy of Hydrostor

Inside Clean Energy: Here’s How Compressed Air Can Provide Long-Duration Energy Storage

By Dan Gearino

Ecologist Christian Voolstra (left) and a colleague collect fragments of coral for a rapid stress test to determine their resilience. Credit: Pete West

Finding Bright Spots in the Global Coral Reef Catastrophe

By Nicola Jones, Yale Environment 360

Women divers of Jeju Island are heading for another day of diving underwater without oxygen tank to catch conches. Credit: Hangyun Kim/MNS

Soft Corals Are Dying Around Jeju Island, a Biosphere Reserve That’s Home to a South Korean Navy Base

By Hangyun Kim

Activists seen holding banner during a protest ahead of the COP26 climate change conference in Glasgow. Credit: Hesther Ng/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

At COP26, a Consensus That Developing Nations Need Far More Help Countering Climate Change

By Agya K. Aning

Vasily Ryabinin scales an overlook on the Taimyr Peninsula in June 2020, with the sprawl of the Norilsk Nickel complex visible below. He toured the area with Russian journalists shortly after resigning from his job with Russia's environmental protection agency due to his concern over what he saw as its failure to fully investigate the spill of 6.5 million gallons of diesel fuel into Arctic waterways last year. Credit: Yuri Kozyrev, NOOR

‘A Trash Heap for Our Children’: How Norilsk, in the Russian Arctic, Became One of the Most Polluted Places on Earth

By Marianne Lavelle

A rendering shows what Veridian at County Park in Ann Arbor, Michigan will look like. Credit: Developed & Designed by THRIVE Collaborative & Union Studio; Visualizations by McLennan Design

Warming Trends: New Rules for California Waste, Declining Koala Bears and Designs Meant to Help the Planet

By Katelyn Weisbrod

A mural in Bayview-Hunters Point, a neighborhood in southeast San Francisco, reads “Bayview Forever.” Credit: Elena Shao

In San Francisco’s Bayview-Hunters Point Neighborhood, Advocates Have Taken Air Monitoring Into Their Own Hands

By Elena Shao

Aerial of a boat traveling through Chesapeake Bay on the Eastern Shore, Maryland. Credit: Edwin Remsburg/VW Pics via Getty Images

Maryland, Virginia Lawmakers Spearhead Drive to Make the Chesapeake Bay a National Recreation Area

By Tigist Ashaka

Workers install photovoltaic panels on the roof of a fish processing plant on Nov. 16, 2021 in Zhoushan, Zhejiang Province of China. Credit: Yao Feng/VCG via Getty Images

The Clean Energy Transition Enters Hyperdrive

By Dan Gearino

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