yellow school buses lined up on a gravel lot

Clean school bus transition gets clogged up

There's still lots of enthusiasm for cleaner buses, advocates say, but some school districts are turning back to diesel.
Politics
Solutions
Trending
Become a monthly donor to TDC
From around the web
A flooded dirt road over a river with houses on the hillside beyond

War then water: Pakistan’s border villagers face back-to-back evacuations

Flooding has forced thousands of residents in Pakistan’s Kasur district to evacuate for the second time this year, following both cross-border conflict and a suspended water-sharing treaty with India.

A smokestack spewing pollution into the sky

Chevron’s boss says the world will need oil for a ‘long, long time’

Chevron CEO Mike Wirth says his company will keep drilling for oil and gas as long as the world keeps using it, even as global forecasts signal declining demand.

Solar panels outside office buildings  in a city

Plug-in balcony solar panels could mean cheaper power. But Canada needs to get on board first

How would you like to lower your electricity bill and help power your home using an abundant renewable energy source — the sun? There is an affordable, do-it-yourself solution for people who own houses, apartment renters and condo dwellers, that doesn't cost buckets of money or require any sort of tedious installation.

An aerial view of solar panels on a roof

Underserved communities are reaping the benefits of london's solar microgrids

Thanks to a change in regulations, residents in social housing can now access the clean, affordable energy coming from their own roofs.
Barber Shop located in Ninth Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana, damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Disaster aid cuts raise fears of post-Katrina failures as hurricane risks grow

A generation after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, survivors and experts warn that sweeping cuts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) under President Trump could leave the U.S. dangerously unprepared for future climate-driven disasters.

Dharna Noor reports for The Guardian.

Keep reading...Show less
A small home with boarded windows and flood-damaged personal effects piled on the sidewalk

New Orleans children carry Hurricane Katrina’s trauma into adulthood

Two decades after Hurricane Katrina, adults who experienced the storm as children continue to struggle with emotional scars and a fractured sense of home, as climate threats to New Orleans persist.

Kathleen Schuster reports for Deutsche Welle.

Keep reading...Show less
Man on roof installing rooftop solar.

Koch-funded campaign ramps up fight against Vermont’s clean energy laws

A national conservative group backed by oil money is spending heavily to weaken Vermont’s climate policies, challenging the state’s efforts to curb fossil fuel use.

Austyn Gaffney reports for Grist in partnership with VTDigger.

Keep reading...Show less
three perched  kookaburras on a branch.

Birds don’t always match their chromosomes, study finds

New research shows that sex reversal — where a bird’s physical traits don’t match its genetic sex — occurs more often in wild Australian birds than scientists expected.

Phie Jacobs reports for Science.

Keep reading...Show less
Geothermal power graphic illustration

Colorado town bets on geothermal to power local business growth

Hayden, Colorado, a small former coal town, is building a geothermal heating and cooling network for its new business park, aiming to attract companies while cutting energy costs.

Phil McKenna and Jake Bolster report for Inside Climate News.

Keep reading...Show less
Man installing solar panels on house roof.

Ohio homeowners team up to cut costs on rooftop solar

A group of Columbus residents is lowering the cost and hassle of going solar by banding together to buy panels in bulk through a cooperative.

Claire Brown reports for The New York Times.

Keep reading...Show less
Water pollution from mine tailings contamination.

A Chinese lawyer takes on mining giants abroad

When a Chinese-owned copper mine in Zambia spilled toxic waste into rivers and farms, veteran lawyer Jingjing Zhang stepped in to help communities fight back, part of her global campaign to hold Chinese companies accountable.

Katie Surma reports for Inside Climate News.

Keep reading...Show less

The Daily Climate

News for a changing planet
Free to your inbox