Nature for nerds
The coal state says it won't use money from BlackRock, whose CEO recently defended the bank's continued investment in fossil fuels. (Yes, this makes no sense.)
Volcanic ash is threatening drinking water supplies while a damaged fiber optic cables make outside communication a challenge.
The company announced it plans to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050. There are just a few teeny, tiny problems.
From nightmare shrubs to not-so-funny feral hogs, invasive species are disturbing the delicate balance of native ecosystems across the country.
Nations across the Pacific have sounded the alarm about tsunamis after a violent eruption shook one of Tonga's volcanoes.
Regulators had noted the pipeline was seriously corroded more than a year before the spill.
The long weekend will feel even longer as wind chills go negative to start followed by snow and rain piling up.
At least two members of a herd of endangered Asian elephants died at a Sri Lankan landfill over the weekend after eating trash.
Wow, a dream job!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
With news Turkmenistan wants to close the Gateway to Hell, it's now or never to visit it. But there are other sites of human folly you'll still be able to see.
All hail the icy, ominous disk that has returned to the Presumpscot River in Maine.
The agency will hire 1,000 workers to tackle climate and clean energy projects using funds from the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
A new report finds it would take a measly extra few billion to get all USPS trucks running on electricity.
It topped 123 degrees Fahrenheit in Western Australia, tying the record for the hottest temperature ever recorded in the southern hemisphere.
The world's oceans, the Arctic Circle, Death Valley, and pretty much all of the U.S. were abnormally hot last year. Thanks, climate change.
The country is suffering through a heat wave that knocked out power in Buenos Aires and challenged all-time records.
The two suits, filed a week apart from each other, detail the scamming going on in the biggest oilfield in the U.S.
A watchdog report found that the government was eager to throw money at projects that never got off the ground.
The U.S. is hemorrhaging money and lives in the face of the climate crisis. No level of adaptation can keep up without cutting emissions.
New York is considering a first-of-its-kind law that could impose standards on a little-regulated industry.