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At an Earth Day gathering last week, activist Tish O’Dell said she’s come to realize that her efforts to secure legal rights for nature have to some extent been thwarted by human beings’ stunted relationship with rivers, streams, wild animals and ecosystems.

CLEVELAND—When Tish O’Dell began community organizing in her hometown of Broadview Heights, Ohio, in 2010 to ban hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, she was certain that changing the law was the surest method to protect residents and the local environment.

Truth, Reckoning and Right Relationship: A Rights of Nature Epiphany

Climate Change

Who Loses in the Trump Administration’s $1 Billion ‘Deal’ to Abandon Offshore Wind?

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That would be American ratepayers—i.e., you.

From our collaborating partner Living on Earth, public radio’s environmental news magazine, an interview by Jenni Doering with Katharine Kollins, the president of Southeastern Wind Coalition.

Who Loses in the Trump Administration’s $1 Billion ‘Deal’ to Abandon Offshore Wind?

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Climate Change

Minneapolis Activists Launch Hunger Strike to Protest Polluting Trash Incinerator

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County officials have said they will eventually close the incinerator, located in a predominantly Black community. Advocates want a concrete plan.

Minneapolis activists are escalating a decades-long fight by going on a hunger strike to demand that local officials shut down a polluting trash incinerator.

Minneapolis Activists Launch Hunger Strike to Protest Polluting Trash Incinerator

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Climate Change

Texas Data Center Developers Play Offense on Water, Claiming Huge Cuts in Usage 

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Ahead of next year’s legislative session, lawmakers probe regulators and industry leaders about how data centers operate.

As Texas confronts decades of water mismanagement and growing demands for electricity from data centers, the state’s top utility regulator, Public Utility Commission Chairman Thomas Gleeson, told a state House committee on Thursday that it’s critical to have a clear picture of how much water data centers use.

Texas Data Center Developers Play Offense on Water, Claiming Huge Cuts in Usage 

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