Climate Law & Liability
Climate Change Has Dangerously Supercharged Fires, Hurricanes, Floods and Heat Waves. Why Didn’t It Come Up More in the Presidential Campaign?
By Kiley Bense, Georgina Gustin, Liza Gross, Marianne Lavelle, Phil McKenna
Returning Grazing Land to Native Forests Would Yield Big Climate Benefits
By Georgina Gustin
Ag Pollution Is Keeping Des Moines Water Works Busy. Can It Keep Up?
By Nina B. Elkadi
Changes May Ease Burdens of European Deforestation Regulation on Small Palm Farms, but Not the Confusion
Story and photos by James Whitlow Delano
Federal Regulators Waited 7 Months to Investigate a Deadly Home Explosion Above a Gassy Coal Mine. Residents Want Action
By James Bruggers, Lee Hedgepeth
Getting Out the Native Vote Counters a Long History of Keeping Tribal Members From the Ballot Box
By Noel Lyn Smith
In Arizona’s Senate Race, Both Candidates Have Plans to Address Drought. But Only One Acknowledges Climate Change’s Role
By Wyatt Myskow
9 Years After the Paris Agreement, the UN Confronts the World’s Failure to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Interview by Jenni Doering, Living on Earth
How Can We Close Nature’s Funding Gap?
By Kiley Price
On Meeker Avenue in Brooklyn, How Environmental Activism Plays Out in the Neighborhood
By Jordan Gass-Pooré
Advocates, Lawmakers Hope 2025 Will Be the Year Maryland Stops Subsidizing Trash Incineration
By Aman Azhar
‘Bad River,’ About a Tribe’s David vs. Goliath Pipeline Fight, Highlights the Power of Long-Term Thinking
By Victoria St. Martin, Phil McKenna
Hindered Wildfire Responses, Costlier Agriculture Likely If Trump Dismantles NOAA, Experts Warn
By Jake Bolster
Texas Sued New Mexico Over Rio Grande Water. Now the States are Fighting the Federal Government
By Martha Pskowski
New Report Shows How Human-Caused Warming Intensified the 10 Deadliest Climate Disasters Since 2004
By Bob Berwyn
Critics Say Alabama’s $5 Billion Highway Project Is a ‘Road to Nowhere,’ but the State Is Pushing Forward
By Dennis Pillion