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The cohort includes undergraduates, graduate students and recent graduates with a demonstrated commitment to climate and environmental reporting.

Inside Climate News’ summer 2024 class of fellows will report from locations across the country as part of a program designed to hone its participants’ writing and reporting skills and deepen their subject matter expertise related to climate change and attribution science, environmental justice, renewable energy, and conservation and regulatory issues at the federal, state and local levels.

Inside Climate News Selects 10 Fellows Specializing in Climate, Environment and Justice Reporting

Climate Change

Can Hydropower Ride the Wave of the Energy Boom?

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The old, reliable technology has experienced slow growth, but industry leaders see opportunities ahead.

The International Energy Agency’s executive director has called hydropower a “forgotten giant,” and has urged governments to do more to remember it. U.S. President Donald Trump has said hydropower is “fantastic,” a sharp contrast to his disdain for wind and solar.

Can Hydropower Ride the Wave of the Energy Boom?

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Climate Change

California Water Board Will Soon Release a New Rule to Limit Water Pollution From Dairies in the State

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More than 10 years after environmental groups petitioned for a new rule, the state plans to require the Central Valley Water Board to update its waste regulations for dairies contributing to groundwater pollution.

California dairies are out of balance. Everyone from environmentalists to regulators to the industry agrees that the nitrogen from milk cow manure is ending up where it can pose a health threat.

California Water Board Will Soon Release a New Rule to Limit Water Pollution From Dairies in the State

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Climate Change

The Iran War Is Making the Case for Renewable Energy, Experts Argue

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As Brent crude approaches $100 a barrel, clean energy advocates say the Hormuz crisis is the latest proof that fossil fuel dependence leaves consumers at the mercy of distant wars.

The war between the United States, Israel and Iran has triggered the largest disruption to global oil supplies in the history of the modern oil market, with Brent crude prices currently hovering around $100 a barrel, sending economic shockwaves across Persian Gulf states, Asian countries and the U.S. with no clear endgame in sight.

The Iran War Is Making the Case for Renewable Energy, Experts Argue

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