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May 16

Australia to expand shipping curbs around Great Barrier Reef

By Rebecca Lee

Australia will widen curbs on shipping around the Great Barrier Reef in an effort to protect the endangered coral system, the government said Saturday.

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May 11

Watch 5:13
Obama administration clears hurdles for drilling off Alaska coast

By PBS News Hour

The Obama administration has essentially given oil company Royal Dutch Shell the go-ahead to start drilling off the coast of Alaska. Environmental groups have long warned of the dangers of doing so, but estimates show there may be as much…

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May 08

Hong Kong calls out litterbugs using DNA testing

By Nora Daly

An innovative anti-littering campaign in Hong Kong uses DNA samples gleaned off discarded debris, combined with demographic data based on the type of detritus and where it was found, to create digital portraits of perpetrators.

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May 03

Some large herbivores may be at risk of extinction, study finds

By Rebecca Lee

The population of large herbivores is declining, posing potential long-term threats to ecosystems worldwide, a new study found.

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Apr 18

Meet the teen suing Oregon for ‘resisting the urgency’ of climate change

By News Desk

Nineteen-year-old environmental activist Kelsey Juliana has a message for the state of Oregon: You're not doing enough to stop climate change She’s now co-plaintiff in a major lawsuit that could force the state of Oregon to take a more aggressive…

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Apr 12

Nearly half of Spain’s electricity came from renewables last month

By Carey Reed

In March, 47 percent of Spain's electricity came from renewable sources.

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Apr 11

Watch 8:41
Gridlocked by the power grid: Why Hawaii’s solar energy industry is at a crossroads

By PBS News Hour

In some parts of Hawaii, where many homeowners have installed rooftop panels to capitalize on federal and state tax credits for using solar energy, the local utility company has slowed down approvals of new solar systems, saying that abundant users…

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Mar 28

Costa Rica utilities burned no fossil fuel in first 75 days of 2015

By Daniel Costa-Roberts

Heavy rainfall in Costa Rica has caused a spike in hydroelectric production this year. Together with green energy from sources like geothermal, wind, solar and biomass, the power glut means the Central American country's energy utilities haven't needed to burn…

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Mar 25

Watch 6:51
Supreme Court tests EPA’s limits on mercury air pollution

By PBS News Hour

The Supreme Court heard arguments over federal pollution mandates. The EPA says its limits on toxic contaminants like mercury in power plant emissions are vital to human health, but energy producers are arguing the EPA didn’t take costs into consideration…

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Mar 13

First time in 40 years, CO2 emissions stalled while the global economy grew

By Anna Sillers

The International Energy Agency announced today that, for the first time in 40 years, carbon dioxide emissions flatlined despite global economy growth.

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