Super-Pollutants
To Live and Die in Philadelphia: Sonya Sanders Grew Up Next Door to a Giant Refinery. She’s Still Suffering From Environmental Trauma
By Victoria St. Martin
The Proposed Cleanup of a Baltimore County Superfund Site Stirs Questions and Concerns in a Historical, Disinvested Community
By Aman Azhar
Q&A: New Rules in Pennsylvania Require Drillers to Disclose Toxic Chemicals Used in Fracking
Interview by Aynsley O’Neill, “Living on Earth”
Wyoming, Slow To Take Federal Clean Energy Funds, Gambles State Money on Carbon Sequestration and Hydrogen Schemes to Keep Fossil Fuels Flowing
By Jake Bolster
EPA Reports ‘Widespread Noncompliance’ With the Nation’s First Regulations on Toxic Coal Ash
By Amy Green
Why a Natural Gas Storage Climate ‘Disaster’ Could Happen Again
By Taylor Kate Brown, Floodlight
In a Steel Town Outside Pittsburgh, an Old Fight Over Air Quality Drags On
By Kiley Bense
Companies in Texas Exploit ‘Loopholes,’ Attribute 1 Million Pounds of Air Pollution to Recent Freezing Weather
By Dylan Baddour, Inside Climate News, and Alejandra Martinez, Texas Tribune
Canada’s Tar Sands Are a Much Larger Source of Air Pollution Than Previously Thought, Study Says
By Nicholas Kusnetz
Environmentalists Rattled by Radioactive Risks of Toxic Coal Ash
By Lee Hedgepeth
Sen. Joe Manchin Eyes a Possible Third Party Presidential Run
By Phil McKenna
El Paso Challenges Oil Refinery Permit
By Martha Pskowski
A Common Fishing Practice Called Bottom Trawling Releases Significant Amounts of CO2 Into Earth’s Atmosphere
By Georgina Gustin
California’s Oil Country Faces an ‘Existential’ Threat. Kern County Is Betting on the Carbon Removal Industry to Save It
By Emma Foehringer Merchant, Inside Climate News, and Joshua Yeager, KVPR
First Uranium Mines to Dig in the US in Eight Years Begin Operations Near Grand Canyon
By Wyatt Myskow
How Wealthy Corporations Use Investment Agreements to Extract Millions From Developing Countries
By Nicholas Kusnetz, Katie Surma