‘Everybody loses’ if production is supercharged in a country with the largest known oil reserves, critics say.
Newsletter
Environmental justice advocates warn that refining Venezuelan oil will concentrate more pollution and cancer risk in majority-Black communities along the Texas and Louisiana Gulf Coast.
Key indicators, from the cost of fossil gas to the number of heat pumps sold, signal building decarbonization will march onward in the U.S. despite challenges.
How Moment Energy harvests and puts to work batteries from worn-out electric cars.
Companies like Kairos Power are building new types of reactors with the encouragement of the Trump administration, but their success is far from assured.
Research reveals microplastics may impair the ocean’s ability to absorb carbon dioxide, weakening a natural buffer against climate change.
A transformation in the seagrass meadows hidden under the surface of the Chesapeake Bay may have huge implications for fish and crabs living in the estuary.
Canada’s outdated flood maps put people at risk. In Montreal, a battle over updating them highlights a nationwide worry over home values and insurance costs
Farmers blame a food additive required by the Danish government to cut methane emissions, but the source is unclear.
Several of Brazil’s largest grain traders are withdrawing from a nearly two-decade-old agreement that restricts soy purchases linked to Amazon deforestation.

A year of clean energy milestones
06 January
Even as the Trump administration rolled back support for renewable energy in the U.S., wind, solar, and electric vehicles made huge strides globally in 2025.
Rock samples collected from the Greenland ice sheet’s Prudhoe Dome show it completely melted in the past 10,000 years — and could vanish again amid climate change.
In his new book, Julian Hattem explores how migration can be a climate solution, not just for those who move, but their home communities as well.
As glaciers melt in Western Canada at an alarming rate, outdoor guides are not only witnessing climate change, but managing the hazards.
Most of the reserves in the country are extra-heavy oil that’s tough to extract and generates more greenhouse gases.
Pipeline safety regulators have imposed their largest fine ever on the company responsible for leaking 1.1 million gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico off the Louisiana coast in 2023.
Rich nations built their wealth on coal, oil and gas. Now the world is asking poorer countries like Mozambique to chart a different course.
The end of key US tax credits for home solar, batteries and heat pumps — combined with new tariffs and domestic manufacturing rules — is expected to raise the cost of electrifying homes in 2026.
Journalism that drives the discussion
Copyright © 2017 Environmental Health Sciences. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2017 Environmental Health Sciences. All rights reserved.
















