A new study provides valuable insights on the world's energy use as our weather gets more extreme.
Fancy man has fancy car that runs on fancy food and fancy drink. Fancy.
The United Arab Emirates says it'll get to "net zero"—if that means anything any more—by 2050.
It's not the world-changing solution some technofuturists think it is—but there are some interesting possibilities.
One of the most infamous nuclear sites in the world is getting a robot-assisted mapping and clean-up mission.
Busted by the neighbors, Link Global is now facing a $5.6 million fine in Canada.
It's the result of a spat involving French fishermen being able to access UK waters, showing the messy Brexit split continues.
Should it really be any surprise that this disaster hit a city that has a high school football team called the Oilers?
The West Virginia senator has received hundreds of thousands from utilities, many of which want a key climate provision in the reconciliation bill watered down.
Crews are scrambling to contain the spill after a pipeline less than three miles off the coast ruptured over the weekend.
That might not sound like a lot, but President Nayib Bukele has pegged his political future to making Bitcoin legal tender.
Energy bills are soaring, fertilizer plants are closing, and meat and soda production are taking a hit. And a cold winter could make it worse.
See if your utility is one of the six that made the "Hall of Shame" for worst offenders.
The Exxon lobbyist who got caught on tape talking about how the company manipulates politicians is no longer employed.
The company tapped the washed-up rapper to write a new version of "Ice Ice Baby," and it sucks.
In the hunt for cheap, carbon-free energy, some miners have sought out partnerships with aging nuclear power plants.
The update from The People's Bank comes on the heels of a years-long crackdown in an effort to stave off illegal activities and environmental apocalypse.
A new report says that Edelman, the world’s largest independent PR company, has been working on an Exxon ad campaign to oppose climate regulations.
The move would take away the largest remaining source of money for international coal projects. But details, including when money will stop flowing, are vague.
The sale comes as Shell faces pressure to lower its emissions. It did so by selling off a polluting part of its business... to another oil company.