Once Trump signs the megabill, the country will no longer have a federal plan to address the climate crisis.
From Alaska to Arizona, tribes are confronting the possibility of stalled projects, energy outages, and economic disruption.
The bill, which just passed Congress, is a bailout for commodity growers and leaves small farmers — and U.S. consumers — out to dry.
The freeze comes after six price hikes in three years.
A sweeping reform to the California Environmental Quality Act has divided environmentalists and climate advocates.
Tools to address PFAS pollution are limited. Here's what researchers are learning about how these chemicals travel through the environment — and what farmers and landowners can do about it.
A new report documents how cities around the world are becoming more liveable and sustainable in the face of climate change.
Critics are calling it "the most anti-environmental bill of all time."
Experts say the most impactful decisions have enabled the Trump administration to gut the federal workforce and freeze funding.
New research sheds light on how rising temperatures are squeezing farmers and raising prices for consumers.
We're losing vital agricultural land. But is solar the main culprit?
The move threatens treaty rights and salmon recovery as energy demands from AI and crypto surge.
Utah used actors, AI, stagecraft, and NDAs as it sought to sway public opinion and take control of 18.5 million acres of federal public land.
Jimmy Tobias, High Country News
The urban heat island sits in a rural heat ocean.
Experts say repealing the "Roadless Rule" won't help stop fires, but it will help loggers.
Thorny questions about who will pay for global climate action derailed a climate summit in Bonn, Germany, this week.
The first tourist season since the storm reveals how much the river and livelihoods have changed.
An analysis of 500 watersheds found levels of organic carbon, phosphorus, and other pollutants up to 103 times higher after a wildfire.
The city with the most lead service lines in the country doesn’t plan to finish replacing them until 2076.
Thousands of people “are falling through the cracks" because they can't make repairs to qualify for the Weatherization Assistance Program.