Orphaned Gas Wells Continue to Emit Dangerous Methane Conservationists are using new camera technology to track emissions By Jennifer Oldham March 23, 2022 In this story: oil, methane gas
Two Pandemic Years Have Created a PPE Wasteland So where do we go from here? By Nikki Kolb March 22, 2022 In this story: recycling
What Divestment From Russia Means for Activism Against Fossil Fuels It’s time to scale up fossil fuels divestment By Isobel Whitcomb March 21, 2022 In this story: Sustainable Finance
Catharsis in the Shadow of the Mountain On Silvia Vasquez-Lavado's chronicle of overcoming sexual abuse and the tallest mountains By Jonathan Hahn March 20, 2022 In this story: books, women, hiking
Can Nature Reclaim Iowa? Some dream of rewilding one of the most abused states in the nation By Stephen Robert Miller March 20, 2022 In this story: saving wild places, climate change, agriculture
Air, Lies, and Instagram Did the air really get better during lockdown? By Krystal Vasquez March 19, 2022 In this story: air, climate change, science, environmental justice, Policy
ICYMI: A Rhino Named Kyiv, Drought Cop & Bear Farms Banned A weekly roundup for busy people By Paul Rauber March 18, 2022 In this story: climate change
What's in a Name? What It Means to Decolonize a Natural Feature. Can changing the title of a mountain or river make it more culturally accessible? By Dina Gilio-Whitaker March 17, 2022 In this story: national parks, monuments
Pass the Boxty: Vegan Twists for a St. Patrick’s Day Feast Vegan takes on traditional Irish food and drink By Joanna Nix March 16, 2022 In this story: vegan, holidays, food and drink
The Trickle-Down Effect of Agriculture in Iowa Will the state's residents always have to put up with terrible water quality? By Charlie Hope-D'Anieri March 16, 2022 In this story: agriculture, climate change, water
Building a Stronger Sierra Club Core values, anchored in equity and justice, can expand the environmental movement By Ramón Cruz March 16, 2022 In this story: climate change
PG&E, the Mountain Maidu, and a Very Powerful River A group of Mountain Maidu has reclaimed its former lands, but not the water By Lauren Markham March 15, 2022 In this story: indigenous communities, utilities, clean energy
Greener Acres Imagine what it would look like to rewild the industrial-agriculture state of Iowa By Jason Mark March 15, 2022 In this story: public lands, saving wild places
We Need Tapirs More Than They Need Us They’re one of the few animals that can resuscitate degraded forests—if there are any of them left By Sara Novak March 14, 2022 In this story: animals
The East Coast’s First Indigenous Kelp Farm Readies for Harvest Seaweed cultivation holds promise as a new front in the fight against climate change By Megan Gannon March 13, 2022 In this story: oceans, indigenous communities
No Blood OR Oil A rare political alignment offers an unmatched moment to finally break our addiction to fossil fuels By Jason Mark March 12, 2022 In this story: oil, fossil fuels, methane gas
ICYMI: Spiders From the Sky, Russian Oil Ban & Evil Vixen Freed From Japanese Stone A weekly roundup for busy people By Paul Rauber March 11, 2022 In this story: climate change
Federal Agency Charts New Course on Environmental Justice and Climate FERC moves to reform its decision-making, despite criticism from fossil fuel companies By Juliet Grable March 10, 2022 In this story: clean energy, fossil fuels
Jet Fuel in Paradise This is how you hobble a city’s climate resilience By Kate Golden March 9, 2022 In this story: science, environmental justice, clean water, climate change, disaster relief
Amid War, Ukrainians Envision a Fossil-Free World And how Big Oil is attempting to exploit the crisis By Jamie Henn March 8, 2022