New research has found that gas and propane stoves can release unsafe levels of benzene into people's homes.
30 tons of ammonium nitrate was reported missing from a train car after it stopped in the Mojave Desert.
New research sheds light on the health impacts of the production of fossil fuels across the country.
The biofuel's bipartisan support isn't about science, but politics.
An experimental UV filter protected mice from sunburns better than existing products, while also being non-toxic to coral.
Children living near a small California airport were more likely to have elevated levels of lead in their blood, a new study found.
FDA testing found that a lot of the company's hand sanitizers was contaminated with methanol.
An unseasonably warm fall and a big push to import and stockpile natural gas have left energy prices plummeting away from summer highs.
Researchers found benzene levels comparable to those in secondhand smoke leaking from stoves in California.
A hydrogen leak prevented the launch of NASA’s SLS rocket this Saturday, in what is a troubling yet highly predictable development.
Doctors say you can rest assured: Tampons aren’t “toxic death sticks.”
On a recent conservative broadcast, the Georgia congresswoman called climate research "unscientific."
The Canairi was inspired by the real-life canaries used by coal miners to detect toxic gases.
The announcement by the Biden Administration might make big corn happy, but don’t buy the climate or cost claims.
Over 170 million Americans were exposed to high amounts of lead as children, researchers say—enough to affect their cognition in later life.
A new study finds that exposure to 2,4-D is expected to grow worse over time, and harmful effects could be worse for children and pregnant people.
The plant houses around 600 tons of ammonium nitrate which risks turning into a bomb when exposed to extreme heat.
There are a number of ways to snuff out Turkmenistan's multidecade natural gas hellhole, from a pile of dirt to bombs. Maybe even a nuclear one.
New models of Venus's atmosphere suggest it may not be as inhospitable as previously believed—though no life as we know it could survive there.
A new report chronicles the staggeringly unequal distribution of carbon emissions tied to the ultra-wealthy's lifestyles.