In a landmark international hearing on climate change, a U.S. representative backed the Paris Agreement, but left unanswered questions about U.S. commitments in a Trump presidency.
Would self-interest, in the end, defeat fear, when we recognize that our national and global well-being would be better ...
Carrboro accused Duke, one the nation’s largest utility companies, of ignoring data about climate change while increasing use ...
A Circuit Court judge has ruled that Gov. Youngkin’s effort to administratively withdraw Virginia from the Regional ...
Naturally occurring meadows of eelgrass—the most common type of seagrass found along the East Coast of the United States—are ...
President-elect Donald Trump’s chief advisers would include one person who calls global warming an “existential” threat and ...
Good morning, its Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2024. Sixty years ago today, 814 demonstrators, most of them students, were arrested at the University of ...
The early coercive pressures applied by Trump loyalists are a taste of what is to come, starting on Jan. 20, 2025. Forces on the right have adopted an extraordinary agenda that, even if it is not a ...
Presidents have extraordinary control over climate policy, in part, because it’s been decades since Congress has passed a ...
Companies continue to invest in sustainability, though many are no longer broadcasting it. This personal reflection is part ...
In other news, the Biden administration has proposed tightening restrictions on nitrogen oxide pollution from gas plants for ...
Climate change is becoming increasingly dangerous for our planet, and global warming is a major factor in this threat. The ...