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Workers at FEMA worry that demanding disaster survivors access services using email could shut out people without internet ...
At low tide on Tybee Island, Georgia, the beach stretches out as wide as it gets with the small waves breaking far away ...
The case is part of a growing movement to force climate action through the courts, led in part by Indigenous youth.
In early July, flash floods along the Guadalupe River killed 138 people and caused an estimated $1.1 billion in damage, ...
Can urban design actually motivate people to walk more? New data says yes - people in walkable cities get about 20 percent ...
As countries try to find agreement on plastic pollution, creative interventions are turning heads — and turning the ...
The draft of the treaty that negotiators began working on last week mentioned human rights at least twice. But the text ...
Despite strong evidence that plastics are harmful to people, oil-producing countries oppose action on human health.
The rare window to ask tough questions opens after a disaster. Too often, it closes before accurate answers can emerge.
The United States is drifting ever further away from science and climate reality. So why does life seem so normal?
The U.S. discards vast quantities of critical minerals in mine waste each year - including enough lithium to power 10 million ...
They brought in their big heavy equipment and started coming up Little River to remove debris,” Huggins said. The workers, ...