
Phantom Threat: Pipes
It’s no secret that America’s infrastructure has seen better days and our municipal gas pipelines are no different. The average gas line in the United States is more than 30 years old, with at least one dating as far back…
It’s no secret that America’s infrastructure has seen better days and our municipal gas pipelines are no different. The average gas line in the United States is more than 30 years old, with at least one dating as far back…
Experts are interviewed about the plastics crisis, plastic's impact on our bodies and oceans, and what can be done to take action.
This episode welcomes three winners of the 2023 Covering Climate Now Journalism Awards: Mark Albert, Cameron Oglesby, and Alleen Brown.
Sang-Hyup Kim, the co-chair of the Presidential Commission on Carbon Neutrality and Green Growth, discusses South Korea’s climate policy.
When a Norfolk Southern train carrying hazardous materials derailed in East Palestine, a national debate was sparked over who was to blame.
This fuel-rich area in Arctic Russia could potentially emit 11.2 billion tons of carbon dioxide throughout its lifetime.
The Haenyeo women of Jeju Island are witnessing firsthand how the climate crisis is destroying the ecosystem they depend on.
As temperatures continue to soar in the Southwest and freshwater supplies dwindle, locals are turning to Indigenous farming practices.
While climate change has largely driven these recent heat records, natural variation from El Niño put them over the top.
The European Space Agency is predicting this year will see some of the hottest temperatures ever recorded on the continent.
Turkey and Syria’s fragile infrastructure includes multiple layers of disregarding the region’s vulnerability to earthquakes.
The Held V. Montana case made international headlines for the plaintiffs’ ages, and the historic nature of a constitutional climate case.