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Environment & Health

Hector Denogean Sr. stands the Mammoth Miners Memorial in Southern Arizona. Denogean says he can’t support a new mine that may take more water out of the drying region. Credit: Wyatt Myskow/Inside Climate News

In Southern Arizona, Community Opposition to Mining Grows in Towns That Once Depended on the Industry

By Wyatt Myskow, Yana Kunichoff

Members of the FEMA Urban Search and Rescue Task Force search a flood damaged area in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on Oct. 4, 2024 in Asheville, N.C. Credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images

With FEMA Under Fire, Congress Asks Whether Agency Is Ready for Hurricane Season

By Nicholas Kusnetz

Researchers walk down to the sea at the Argentinean Alimirante Brown Station on the Antarctic Peninsula. Credit: Ted Scambos/Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental/UC Boulder

Trump Administration Decommissions Sea Ice Data That Sounded an Alarm on Arctic Climate Change

By Peter Aldhous

A passenger jet takes off at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport on Aug. 12, 2024, in Arlington, Va. Credit: J. David Ake/Getty Images

Scientists Forecast a Big Increase of Clear-Air Turbulence That Could Lead to Bumpier Flights

By Bob Berwyn

Scientists Are Reviving Climate and Nature Research Efforts in the Wake of Trump Cuts

By Kiley Price

A view of the Marathon Petroleum Refinery in Detroit. Credit: Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Michigan Researcher’s Work on Air Pollution and Racial Inequities Caught in Funding Freeze at National Science Foundation

By Siri Chilukuri

People carry their belongings through a flooded area after heavy monsoon rainfall in Punjab, Pakistan on Aug. 25, 2022. Credit: Shahid Saeed Mirza/AFP via Getty Images

Invisible Deaths: As Climate Disasters Kill in Pakistan, the True Scale Is Unknown

By Keerti Gopal

Workers cap an orphaned well near Oil City, La. on March 8, 2023. Credit: Cooper Neill for The Washington Post via Getty Images

Scientists Map Where Orphan Wells Pose Threats to Aquifers

By Martha Pskowski

A family walks through what remains of their grandfather’s house in a neighborhood decimated by the Marshall Fire on Jan. 2, 2022, in Louisville, Colo. Credit: Michael Ciaglo/Getty Images

Climate Disaster Survivors Organize Across America, Turning Common Bonds of Loss Into Action

By Gabe Castro-Root

John Cangialosi, senior hurricane specialist at NOAA’s National Hurricane Center, inspects a satellite image of Hurricane Beryl on July 1, 2024, in Miami. Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

How Massive Cuts to NOAA Could Impact Everything From Weather Apps to Agriculture to National Security

Interview by Jenni Doering, Living on Earth

Staff at the International Bird Rescue in Los Angeles examine a sick brown pelican suffering from domoic acid poisoning. Credit: Ariana-Gastelum, courtesy of the International Bird Rescue

California Toxic Algal Bloom Blamed for Months-long Marine Life Poisoning

By Teresa Tomassoni

A family salvages belongings in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on Sept. 30, 2024, in Old Fort, N.C. Credit: Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images

An Insurance Crisis Compounded by Climate Change Threatens the Broader U.S. Economy

By Lisa Sorg

A blanket of smog covers downtown Los Angeles as seen from Mulholland Drive in 1984. Credit: UCLA Library, Los Angeles Times Photographic Collection

Ignoring Federal Law, House GOP Targets California’s Nation-Leading Vehicle Pollution Rules

By Liza Gross

The Baltimore City Department of Public Works distributes water in 2022 after E. coli bacteria was found in local drinking water. Baltimore is one of the cities awarded an environmental justice grant that the EPA plans to terminate. Among the grant's aims: water quality testing. Credit: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

EPA Funding Cuts Target Disadvantaged Communities, Analysis Shows

By Marianne Lavelle, Peter Aldhous

The plastics plant in Gregory, Texas, operated by ExxonMobil and the Saudi Basic Industries Corporation started operations in 2022. Credit: Dylan Baddour/Inside Climate News

Plans Advance for Huge New Exxon Plastics Plant in Texas

By Dylan Baddour

A view of the coal-fired Brandon Shores Power Plant in Baltimore. Credit: Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Consumer Watchdog Accuses Regional Grid Operator of Overcharging Marylanders for Power

By Aman Azhar

Ruby Banta (center) and friends Nova Russell (left) and Colette Duvall (right) held a yard sale to benefit the spotted salamander via a local nonprofit, Friends of Shades Creek. Credit: Courtesy of the Banta family

For Alabama’s Spotted Salamanders, a Win and a Warning

By Lee Hedgepeth

President Donald Trump speaks alongside coal miners before signing executive orders about coal production at the White House on April 8 in Washington, D.C. Credit: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

In His First 100 Days, Trump Launched an ‘All-Out Assault’ on the Environment

By Kiley Bense, Bob Berwyn, Dennis Pillion, Georgina Gustin, Jake Bolster, Marianne Lavelle, Wyatt Myskow

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