Scott Pruitt Wasted Too Much of Our Time—And the Planet’s as Well Pruitt couldn’t even do dastardly right, but inaction and incompetence are their own threats By Jason Mark July 6, 2018 In this story: federal policy, politics, climate change, activism, democracy
ICYMI: Scott Pruitt Resigns, Spiders Go Electric, & More A weekly roundup for busy people By Heather Smith July 5, 2018 In this story: climate change, politics, federal policy, animals, science
What Can Dockless Bikes Tell Us About Cities? Love them or hate them, they’re generating loads of newfound data By Enrique Gili July 8, 2018 In this story: biking, transportation
Rhode Island Becomes First State to Sue Big Oil Over Climate Change The Ocean State seeks to recover costs associated with climate impacts By Jason Mark July 2, 2018 In this story: climate change
ICYMI: Fat Raccoons, World Cup Brats, Extinct Bear Sighting, & More A weekly roundup for busy people By Paul Rauber June 29, 2018 In this story: climate change
Astonishing Photos Capture the Lucid Beauty of Polar Ice Camille Seaman's mesmerizing photography clarifies the Arctic's vanishing reality By Jonathan Hahn June 27, 2018 In this story: climate change
Judge Tosses SF and Oakland Lawsuits Targeting Big Oil Ruling is a setback to holding major carbon polluters liable for climate change By Jason Mark June 26, 2018 In this story: climate change
Climate Change Is a Tick’s Best Friend Mary Beth Pfeiffer’s “Lyme” sounds the alarm on a climate-driven epidemic By Jonathan Hahn June 26, 2018 In this story: books, climate change, health
How to Walk in a Beautiful Way in an Age of Climate Change Camille Seaman and her daughter take in the vanishing reality of polar ice By Jonathan Hahn June 26, 2018 In this story: climate change, photography
Making Electricity Often Requires Steam—and That's Bad News for Rivers Most of our modern power plants are basically little more than steam engines By Katherine Wei June 25, 2018 In this story: clean energy, rivers, water