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Hot Topics
  • September 4, 2025 | Unlocking Climate Secrets of Hawai‘i’s Drowned Reefs
  • September 3, 2025 | Uganda’s Refugees Turn Food Waste into Clean Fuel
  • August 28, 2025 | Survey: ‘Very Few’ Africans Place Responsibility for Climate Action on ‘Rich Nations’
  • August 25, 2025 | Alaska’s Tongass National Forest at Risk Once Again
  • August 7, 2025 | Surviving the Thaw: Greenland’s Inuit Grapple with Their Melting World
  • August 4, 2025 | Scientists Warn Major Glaciers Won’t ‘Survive This Century,’ With Grave Impacts for Billions
  • July 31, 2025 | The Makah Tribe Is Calling Back the Whales
  • July 28, 2025 | Urban Heat Islands ‘Increasing Faster’ in Poorer Cities
  • July 2, 2025 | The Gas is Always Greener on the EU Side
  • July 2, 2025 | The Role of Energy in the Oman Economy: Opportunities, Outlook

News & Comments, Nuclear May 29, 2017

Six years after Fukushima, much of Japan has lost faith in nuclear power

Tatsujiro Suzuki, Nagasaki University Six years have passed since the Fukushima nuclear disaster on March 11, 2011, but Japan is still dealing with its impacts….


[DG ECHO/Flickr]

Climate Change, News & Comments, Policy & Strategy May 25, 2017

Is ‘less’ really ‘more’ in the new European Consensus on Development?

European development policy must prioritise democracy, inclusiveness and sustainability. To do this the bloc has to change the way it interacts with stakeholders and support…


Renewable Energy Development in the California Desert

Nature & Environment, Policy & Strategy, Renewables, Solar, Wind May 23, 2017

California Grid Smashes Record, Gets 67% of Energy From Renewables

CALIFORNIA LEADING THE WAY On May 13, 2017, California smashed through another renewable energy milestone as its largest grid, controlled by the California Independent System…


Climate Change, Nature & Environment May 23, 2017

This Tiny Remote Island Has Been Named The Most Plastic-Polluted Place on Earth

This is unprecedented In the middle of the South Pacific, there’s a remote, uninhabited island, virtually hidden more than 5,000 kilometres (3,100 miles) from the…


Climate Change May 22, 2017

Dams are major driver of global environmental change

Water reservoirs created by damming rivers could have significant impacts on the world’s carbon cycle and climate system that aren’t being accounted for, a new…


Sherman Cahal, shutterstock

CCS, Climate Change, Nature & Environment May 8, 2017

Worthless mining waste could suck CO₂ out of the atmosphere and reverse emissions

The Paris Agreement commits nations to limiting global warming to less than 2˚C by the end of the century. However, it is becoming increasingly apparent…


Climate Change, Policy & Strategy, Renewables April 12, 2017

6 Charts That Show Trump Isn’t Stopping the Renewable Energy Revolution Any Time Soon

The solar industry was responsible for creating one out of every 50 new jobs in the U.S. last year and the country’s fastest-growing occupation is…


Biofuels, Biomass, News & Comments February 27, 2017

What’s the best way to improve bee habitat?

There’s more to making pollinators happy than planting lots of flowers. November 15, 2016 — Each morning last summer, Michael Roswell walked through restored meadows…


California Gov. Jerry Brown signs SB350 on Oct. 7, 2015. The bill calls for increasing the state’s renewable electricity use to 50 percent and doubling energy efficiency in existing buildings by 2030. AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

Climate Change, Renewables February 17, 2017

Will blazing a low-carbon path pay off for California?

President Trump has made it clear he intends to dismantle the Obama administration’s policies for reducing U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. But California Governor Jerry Brown…


News & Comments February 15, 2017

A Tale of Two Countries – China’s Betting on Renewable Energy While Trump Dreams of Coal’s Glory Days

That whoosh you just heard was China passing the United States in the race for the 21st century energy economy. Or is it the 21st…


Climate Change, News & Comments February 10, 2017

Smog chokes coal-addicted Poland

The soupy grey smog shrouding Polish cities this winter is one of the most visible symptoms of the EU member’s addiction to coal, a deadly…


Climate Change, Policy & Strategy, Renewables February 8, 2017

Renewables: Europe on track to reach its 20% target by 2020

How is Europe performing in renewable energy? Having achieved a share of 16% renewables in its final energy consumption in 2014 and an estimated share…


Rio Grande de Terraba Estuary. Photo by Bernard DUPONT/ Flickr.

Hydro, Nature & Environment, Policy & Strategy, Renewables February 6, 2017

Costa Rica’s Supreme Court stops hydroelectric project for failing to consult indigenous people

On November 1, 2016, the Constitutional Chamber of Costa Rica’s Supreme Court provided some good news to a Terraba (Teribe) Indigenous territory when it stopped…


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Last Issue

  • July-September 2025 (ONE)July-September 2025 (ONE)
Hawaii: hot lava on the Big Island. Photo credits: Eli Duke (Wikimedia)

Unlocking Climate Secrets of Hawai‘i’s Drowned Reefs


Clean cooking is a challenge specially in Refugee settlements where fuel access is very limited. By using an Improved Cook Stove (ICS) such as the Berkeley Darfur Stove (BDS), women reduce smoke inhalation by 77% and fuel consumption by 60%. Photo credit: Laura Toledano (Wikimedia)

Uganda’s Refugees Turn Food Waste into Clean Fuel


African market. Photo credits: Francisco Anzola (Flickr)

Survey: ‘Very Few’ Africans Place Responsibility for Climate Action on ‘Rich Nations’


View of Tongass National Forest, Alaska. Photo credits: Velkiira (Wikimedia)

Alaska’s Tongass National Forest at Risk Once Again


Colorful houses dot the hillsides in Qaqortoq. Photo credits: Maddy Keyes/Inside Climate News

Surviving the Thaw: Greenland’s Inuit Grapple with Their Melting World


Perito Moreno Glacier, Los Glaciares National Park, Argentina. Photo credits: Luca Galuzzi (Wikimedia)

Scientists Warn Major Glaciers Won’t ‘Survive This Century,’ With Grave Impacts for Billions


Makah Indians cutting up a whale, ca. 1910, Neah bay. Photo credits: Museum of History & Industry, Seattle (Wikimedia)

The Makah Tribe Is Calling Back the Whales


Sunset in Cairo, from Al-Azhar Park. Photo credits: Matt Wan (Flickr)

Urban Heat Islands ‘Increasing Faster’ in Poorer Cities


Combined cycle gas fired power plant. Photo credits: peoplepoweredbyenergy (Wikimedia) / Modified by ONE

The Gas is Always Greener on the EU Side


Birkat Al-Mawz, Oman. Photo credits: Marc Veraart (Flickr)

The Role of Energy in the Oman Economy: Opportunities, Outlook


The Lost Bayou: Grand Bayou

Grand Bayou, LA. At one time, it was a lively community of close-knit families, until they were forced to leave. ©2020. Garde Voir Ci magazine. Nicholls State University Department of Mass Communication.
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World Rainforest Day

Rainforests cover only 2 percent of the planet’s surface area but are responsible for more than 25% of all Western medicine and house more than 50% of the world’s plant and animal species.
View More

Plastic litters one of the world's remotest islands - Henderson Island

Plastic litters one of the world's remotest islands - Henderson Island
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