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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 65)

Ending Amazon deforestation: 4 essential reads about the future of the world’s largest rainforest

Jennifer Weeks
The best reads on the nuanced issues in the Amazon — and who and what is causing it

Unequal mercy: The increasing persecution of refugees

Helen Benedict
Countries embracing Ukrainians are simultaneously persecuting equally desperate refugees from elsewhere

“A ticking atomic bomb”: The Cold War legacy lurking in U.S. groundwater

Mark Olalde, Mollie Simon, Alex Mierjeski
Even after regulators say cleanup is complete, polluted water and sickness are often left behind

How to design clean energy subsidies that work — without wasting money on free riders

Eric Hittinger, Eric Williams, Qing Miao
The key to aiding in industry switches to clean energy may lie in government subsidies

After COP27, all signs point to world blowing past the 1.5 degrees global warming limit

Peter Schlosser
COP27 proved we have a long way to go to reduce our emissions in order to not exceed the tipping point

It’s time for a Christmas truce in Ukraine — and real peace talks

Medea Benjamin, Nicolas J.S. Davies
Neither side can win militarily — and Ukraine will never be in a stronger position. The choice is peace or disaster

Ben & Jerry’s owner may launch ice cream made from cow-free dairy

Michael La Corte
The potential rise of lab-grown milk could result in amazing advances in the world of ice cream

Deadly heat waves engulfed the planet this year: Climate change is a national security crisis

Russel Honoré
As a U.S. Army general, I prepared to do battle with enemies and face disaster. All of humanity must do that now

Pawpaws, America’s latest fruit craze, are being threatened by climate change

Diana Kruzman
Everyone wants a piece of the lovingly nicknamed "Appalachian banana.” Can the species survive a warming planet?

As Tuvalu succumbs to rising sea levels, the island nation wants to be the first virtual country

Natalie Jonas
The small Pacific island aspires to maintain its sovereignty even as it disappears into the ocean

The world’s insurance bill from natural disasters this year: $115 billion

Lylla Younes
That’s 42 percent higher than the 10-year average

South Africa’s small-scale fishers have been marginalized since apartheid — what needs to change

Kathleen Auld, Loretta Feris
Small-scale fishers have long suffered discrimination in South Africa

“Catastrophic failure”: DOJ tried to hide report warning private border wall in Texas could collapse

Perla Trevizo, Jeremy Schwartz
The report confirms an investigation that found the privately built fencing could collapse during major flooding

The real inflation story: Climate change is driving up food prices

Mark Schapiro
COP27 and food price inflation are part of the same story

A nation of attention junkies: Trump and Elon are the perfect symbols of America’s predicament

Brian Karem
We can't give Musk and Trump the attention they crave (because it's literally impossible). We also can't look away

Ancient traces of hurricanes’ impact on the Atlantic sea floor doesn’t bode well for the coast

Tyler Winkler
An oceanographer explains the historical devastation of hurricanes, and the danger they pose to coastal places

GOP plans another post-election “autopsy”: But this one is rigged for Trump

Heather Digby Parton
Remember 2013, when Republicans were advised to moderate their message and tone down the racism? Neither do they

As the outdoor industry ditches ‘forever chemicals,’ REI lags behind

Joseph Winters
Here are some of the other brands that have promised to phase out PFAS

Herschel Walker, South Park, and the Prius: How loving gas-guzzlers became political

Kate Yoder
Why do Republicans defend polluting vehicles? Because Democrats love the saintly Prius

Will wild coffee go extinct from climate change? Botanists say we can still save this crop

Troy Farah
Climate change might drive wild coffee extinct, which would have broad repercussions for the global industry

What planting tomatoes shows us about climate change

Edward Doddridge
In Tasmania, you can now safely plant tomatoes 18 days earlier than you could in the 1900s

Former Obama lawyer Ian Bassin: The coming indictment of Donald Trump will break his power

Chauncey DeVega
Former associate White House counsel says Garland, DOJ are going "by the book" and have a "rock solid" case

The return of the American bison is an environmental boon — and a logistical mess

Lina Tran
American bison are back on the rise. The problem is, they don't respect fences

Did Western philosophy ruin Earth? A philosopher’s letter of apology to the world

Michael Paul Nelson, Kathleen Dean Moore
Much of western European philosophy, from ancient Greece to the present, has led directly to unspeakable evil
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