A new study looks at how forests that are regrowing trees may still emit carbon up to 10 years after they're first logged.
CNBC let the head of a DC think tank defend an oil CEO's leadership of a climate conference. There was just one problem.
The appliances are outdated and dangerous. We should look into changing that.
HGTV and Netflix stars are the newest spokespeople for fossil fuel campaigns.
The oil giant's internal climate models correctly forecast the climate change we're seeing now—all while the company pushed denial in public.
“This is the kind of weather you would get in a year and we compressed it just into two weeks.”
The chair of a consumer protection agency said no ban is under consideration after intense backlash to a commissioner's comments.
A prominent group of deniers with a history of dark money benefactors is now trying to claim media is biased, thanks to new funding.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission says it could take action around gas-burning stoves, which are linked to asthma and other health issues.
A heat wave has melted snow and left open stretches of grass across many of Europe's most famous ski areas.
Some 500,000 customers lost power in the Carolinas—which, utilities say, was needed to help stave off a much bigger disaster.
Gov. Kathy Hochul signed a bill that would legalize composting human bodies after death.
In 2023 we will see the first real movement in a global energy transition—and will hit lots of bumps in the road along the way.
A whistleblower formerly employed by biomass giant Enviva said the company's claims about how it produces its products are "a joke."
From a dumb Republican war on investing to nuclear energy's renaissance, here are some of the historic moments from this year.
The new law effectively phases out private ownership of big cats and immediately bans cub-petting attractions.
Elon Musk, Big Meat, and oil industry PR made our naughty list this year.
An investigation from NPR shows how a shadowy consulting firm has helped utilities push their message in local media for years.
Some members of Congress are dredging up a years-old trope to target environmental NGOs.
The move comes as renewables are projected to make up the majority of electricity on the grid next year.