Despite a “landmark” agreement, automakers and the repair industry are still fighting over who controls car data.
However, outdated science and views leads many researchers to ignore traditional knowledge.
The social cost of carbon quantifies the hidden price of emitting CO2, from flood damage to health effects.
A new Grist project takes a holistic look at heat solutions and adaptations that will help cities prepare for one of climate change's deadliest impacts.
The National Park Service's vision of Quitobaquito Springs as a "wild" park was at odds with the Indigenous caretakers already living there.
More homeowners than ever need flood insurance. Fewer than ever can afford it.
Palm and soy are taking over the world's cropland. Enter Zero Acre Farms.
New laws passed this weekend tackle carbon offsets, corporate emissions, and clean energy.
Two years after a wind farm was ruled illegal in Norway, Sámi activists are still fighting for its closure.
Natural disasters now cost the U.S. insurance industry $100 billion a year. What happens when no one wants to pick up the tab?
An initiative in Florida, Louisiana, and Arizona enlists clinicians to ensure resources go to the right places during heat waves.
Advocates allege the state hindered Black residents from receiving critical federal funds.
The effort to update the state’s oilfield waste disposal rules was initiated by Railroad Commissioner Jim Wright, one of the state’s top oil and gas regulators who has investments in the industry.
The environmental health crisis ruminating in Houston’s Southwest Crossing neighborhood is the product of climate change and an unstable energy grid.
This summer, batteries bolstered the heat-battered grids of Texas and California, underscoring the tech’s value as a low-carbon way to keep the lights on.
Julian Spector, Canary Media
The Biden administration wants to expand access to solar financing, but some resilience advocates disagree with the approach.
China dominates production of the crucial metals, and wind companies are scouring the globe for more sources.
The state’s decision will do little to solve a water shortage largely driven by irrigated agriculture.
"We invest in flood zones more than safe zones," says the author of a report that finds construction in such areas has jumped 122 percent.
“If one group gets all the pollution and another group gets all the jobs, it’s not really a trade-off anymore.”
Terry L. Jones, Floodlight