Politics
Solutions
Trending
Become a monthly donor to TDC
From around the web
A shareholder agreement with a gold pen on top of it

The man whom Exxon tried to drill

After years of using shareholder votes to pressure oil giants on climate, one activist triggered a corporate backlash that is reshaping the limits of investor power.
North Atlantic erosion eating away at the coastline jeopardizing structures

Critical Atlantic Ocean current significantly more likely to collapse than thought

Scientists say finding is ‘very concerning’ as collapse would be catastrophic for Europe, Africa, and the Americas.

Siberian taiga and the river Tunguska fall from a helicopter. Larch taiga in September on the banks of the river and in Evenkia. Krasnoyarsk region Russia

Rusting rivers: Alarm grows over uptick in acidic Arctic waters

Climate change has thawed permafrost and increased rainfall in the Far North, producing sulfuric acid that is turning rivers and lakes yellow or rusty orange. Scientists are scrambling to parse the impacts on wildlife, fish, and the drinking water of Indigenous communities.
Two farmers crouching in a field reviewing the soil

Farmers struggle to rebuild soil after Hurricane Helene’s devastating floods

After Hurricane Helene washed away or buried vital topsoil across the Southeast, farmers are facing years-long efforts to restore the foundation of their livelihoods.

An ethanol plant with green fields in the foreground

Iowa moves to shield farmers, ethanol plants, from lawsuits over emissions

Climate lawsuits are a largely nonexistent threat to farmers in the state of Iowa, but ethanol producers could benefit from the law.

Gas dehydration process to remove moisture from gas before enter to carbon dioxide unit, pressurize vessel and piping of petrochemical industry.

Carbon removal industry reels as Microsoft retreats

Once held up as a key solution to climate change, a field that aims to remove carbon from the atmosphere is struggling to catch on.
Trucks for transporting cranberries off to a processing plant drive along the edge of the vibrant red berry filled bog

Cranberry bog data project shows how to turn farms into wetlands

The largest restored wetlands in Massachusetts now cover hundreds of acres of what used to be cranberry farms.
A woman holding a protest sign saying 'There is no planet B'

Is it time for planetary health to become a core clinical responsibility?

As climate change and environmental degradation increasingly drive illness, clinicians are being urged to treat planetary health as inseparable from patient care.

A person holding a pile of organic soil in his hands

Deep soils could hold keys to climate resilience

A new research center is investigating how ancient soils could help farmers adapt to climate change and a warmer future.
A person holding a level on a solar panel

Hosting solar can be a lifeline for farmers, but overcoming local opposition is tough

Local opposition to solar has long been an obstacle for green energy developers in the United States, but some communities are working to reverse local restrictions.
Renewable energy in the Cuban countryside with small white domicile and an oxcart

Cuba could beat US energy blockade with $8B investment in renewables, says think tank

Report by Common Wealth argues rest of the world should pay for country’s transition as reparative climate finance.

The Daily Climate

News for a changing planet
Free to your inbox