Showing results for: Climate Change (page 59)
Professional “owl terrorists” scare off barred owls with shotguns in the name of conservation
Christopher J. Preston
In the Pacific Northwest, the barred owl is being shot to save the spotted owl. Is it working?
The train derailment in Ohio was a disaster waiting to happen
John McCracken
Trains carry hazardous chemicals every day. They're also dangerously unregulated.
Environmental plan for England asks farmers to “restore nature”
Elise Wach
The UK government's environment improvement plan pledges to restore 1.2 million acres of wildlife-rich habitat
Are the feds sacrificing endangered salmon to help potato farmers?
Jake Bittle, B. ‘Toastie’ OasterHow Cape Town’s “Day Zero” crisis helped mobilize water conservation efforts
Matthew Wingfield
Between 2016 and 2018 Cape Town experienced the real possibility of "Day Zero," the day when the taps would run dry
Pulses are packed with goodness: 5 cool things you should know about them
Nadia Radzman
Beans, lentils and chickpeas are all technically pulses — and they all have interesting stories
As Louisiana’s coast disappears, its historic communities are disappearing too
Jake Bittle
New levees are too late to stop the exodus for bayou villages like Pointe-aux-Chenes
California oil industry uses high gasoline prices to roll back climate agenda, critics allege
Aaron Cantú
Industry lobbyists' well-funded referendum could sway voters with misinformation
Against the bait and switch censorship of Roald Dahl
Alison Stine
There are issues with the children’s book writer, but they’re not the words “fat" or "men"
The United Nations says Denmark and Greenland must address colonialism
Joseph Lee
As climate change alters Inuit life, experts call governments to consult with Indigenous communities before mining
Fox News texts reveal the truth: The Big Lie was a con — that the viewers were in on
Amanda Marcotte
Texts prove Fox hosts knowingly lied about the 2020 election — here's why they won't lose viewers
New research illuminates how the human brain creates its own psychedelic drugs
Troy Farah
A new study challenges serotonin's role in depression, while partly explaining why our bodies make drugs like DMT
World Bank leader accused of climate denial says he’s stepping down
Brett Marsh
When asked about climate change, David Malpass said he’s “not a scientist.” Soon he won’t be a World Bank president
Jimmy Carter’s lasting Cold War legacy: His human rights focus helped dismantle Soviet Union
Robert C. Donnelly
Carter is often criticized for foreign policy weakness, but his approach to the Soviet Union was highly effective
How the “electrify everything” movement went mainstream
Emily Pontecorvo
One in five Americans now lives in an area that's trying to move buildings off fossil fuels
Documents show how a pipeline company paid Minnesota millions to police protests
Alleen Brown, John McCracken
From riot gear to PR to Dairy Queen, records detail every expense Enbridge reimbursed after the Line 3 protests.
Why are BP, Shell, and Exxon suddenly backing off their climate promises?
Kate Yoder
"If we see value, we’ll do it. If we don’t, we won’t."
Homes in flood zones are overvalued by billions, study finds
Zoya Teirstein
Failure to account for climate change means low-income homeowners could see their home values plunge
As climate change disrupts ecosystems, a new outbreak of bird flu spreads to mammals
Zoya Teirstein
“Am I concerned? Hell yes, I’m concerned”
Experts sound the alarm on the “merger mania” in the military-industrial complex
Julia Gledhill, William D. Hartung
Tackling Pentagon waste means battling the big weapons makers and asking more of Congress
“Business as usual”: Study shows how corporations deceive the public to “greenwash their brand”
Jake Johnson
Big companies' climate commitments have been "wholly insufficient and mired by ambiguity"
Big Oil allies outspent clean energy groups by 27 times on ads and lobbying to kill climate policies
Christian Downie, Robert Brulle
New research tracks how polluters spend their billions
Melanie Lynskey, like her “Last of Us” character, proves her strength beyond physicality
Kelly McClure
Having the best ideas has nothing to do with having the biggest muscles, as Lynskey proves post casting controversy
The case to let children vote: Why law professor Adam Benforado calls for a “minor revolution”
Gail Cornwall
"We need to notice the suffering of children, and rethink our approach to every field," Benforado said
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