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Climate Change

Duke Energy's Marshall Steam Station is one of the utility's largest power-generating facilities in the Carolinas. Duke plans to retire two of the four coal-fired units soon and replace them with new natural gas plants. Credit: Lisa Sorg/Inside Climate News

A New Bill Would Allow Duke Energy to Retreat From North Carolina’s Ambitious Climate Goals

By Lisa Sorg

How Hurricanes Can Fuel Wildfires in the Southeast

By Kiley Price

Prescribed burns are commonly used to limit fuel availability and reduce the number of wildfires. Research suggests the blazes also cause excess premature deaths due to particulate pollution. Credit: Lee Hedgepeth/Inside Climate News

What’s Causing Birmingham’s Code Red Air Quality Alert?

By Lee Hedgepeth

More than 1 million people skated on the Rideau Canal Skateway, the world's largest ice rink, in Ottawa this winter. Credit: Phil McKenna/Inside Climate News

Can the World’s Largest Ice Rink Survive a Warming Planet?

By Phil McKenna

The entrance to the Marine Corps Base in Quantico, Va. Credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images

Future of Funding for Military’s Climate Change Plans Caught Up in Fury of Trump Cuts

By Charles Paullin

Rollbacks Gut Environmental Justice Gains, Former EPA Official Says

By Aman Azhar

Cheryl Johnson stands near the office of People for Community Recovery in Altgeld Gardens. Credit: Zubaer Khan/Chicago Sun-Times

Hazel Johnson Launched an Environmental Movement in Chicago That Trump Is Trying to End

By Brett Chase, Chicago Sun-Times

Annabel Williams, an apprentice at Wolfe’s Neck Center for Agriculture and the Environment, interacts with some of the cows during her chores round on Sept. 17, 2024.

Feeding Cows Seaweed Could Cut Methane Emissions and Diversify Maine’s Coastal Economy, but Can It Scale?

Story and photos by Matilda Hay

In Iola, Texas, the Blue Jay solar and storage plant. Credit: Jon Shapley/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

Trump’s Tariffs and New State Regulation Could Increase Power Costs in Texas

By Arcelia Martin

Cars drive along a flooded street on September 29, 2023, in the Brooklyn borough of New York City as remnants of Tropical Storm Ophelia reaches the Northeast. Credit: Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

How New York’s $75 Billion Climate Superfund Will Work

Interview by Aynsley O’Neill, Living on Earth

The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy assists a NASA shipborne investigation into climate change in the Chukchi Sea of the Arctic Ocean in 2011. Credit: Kathryn Hansen/NASA

US Coast Guard Academy Censors ‘Climate Change’ From Its Curriculum

By Marianne Lavelle

Hundreds of demonstrators gather to protest mass firings by the Trump administration outside the NOAA headquarters on March 3 in Silver Spring, Md. Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Scientists Are Rising Up to Resist Trump Policies

By Bob Berwyn

Sprinklers water crops on a farm near Coachella, Calif. during a long-duration heat wave and drought on July 3, 2024. Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images

USDA’s Purge of Climate Data is Illegal and Reckless, Doing Immediate Harm to Farmers, Lawsuit Alleges  

By Miranda Lipton

Paramedics treat a person who fainted in front of the Supreme Court on June 20, 2024, as temperatures reached more than 90 degrees Fahrenheit in Washington, D.C. Credit: Andrew Leyden/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Americans Are Increasingly Aware That Climate Change Is Harming Their Health

By Keerti Gopal

New research shows how freshwater from melting ice along the edge of Antarctica is changing the density of ocean layers, which could weaken the world's strongest ocean current by 20 percent in the next 25 years. Credit: Bob Berwyn/Inside Climate News

Global Warming Will Weaken Earth’s Strongest Ocean Current, New Study Predicts

By Bob Berwyn

The Benjamin Franklin Bridge crosses the Delaware River in Philadelphia. Credit: Thomas Hengge/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Water Agency Renews Concern That Sea-Level Rise Will Flood Drinking-Water Intakes in Philadelphia, Southern N.J.

By Jon Hurdle

A home is damaged by a fallen tree after a tornado hit Gaithersburg, Md. in June last year. Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Weathering the Storm: Maryland’s Chief Resilience Officer Reflects on Year One as Climate Threats Increase

By Aman Azhar

Birds That Live Long and Slow May Be More Vulnerable to Climate Change, Research Finds

By Kiley Price

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