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As the Rio Grande dries out months early, water managers look to blessings, prayers and groundwater to save the acequias that have spread water, history and culture to farmers and families since the 16th century.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.—On a sunny spring morning at the end of March, a woman raised her little girl above an irrigation ditch that runs just west of the Rio Grande in Albuquerque’s South Valley. The toddler, with a braided head piece crowning her long, brown hair and artificial flowers around her neck, enthusiastically tossed an assortment of colored petals into the water below as a small crowd cheered. 

Record-Low Snowpack and Historic Heat Threaten New Mexico’s Time-Honored Irrigation Canals

Climate Change

As Energy, War and Climate Collide, A Climate Summit in Colombia Charts a Path Beyond Fossil Fuels

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Participants broke a long-standing taboo by openly linking oil and gas not just to emissions, but to war, displacement and economic instability.

While some major fossil fuel producers keep pushing for expanded oil and gas use, which is linked to warfare, economic shocks and ecological damage, more than 50 countries at the first Conference on Transitioning Away From Fossil Fuels began developing plans to shift toward renewable energy systems designed for stability and abundance rather than scarcity and conflict.

As Energy, War and Climate Collide, a Conference in Colombia Charts a Path Beyond Fossil Fuels

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Climate Change

Florida Opens Criminal Probe Into Sloth World After Dozens of Animal Deaths

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Most of the wild sloths imported by a planned tourist attraction in Orlando did not survive.

The Florida Attorney General’s office announced a criminal investigation into the deaths of dozens of sloths at a now-shuttered Orlando business, a development that signals a new level of animal-welfare accountability in the commercial wildlife trade. 

Florida Opens Criminal Probe Into Sloth World After Dozens of Animal Deaths

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Climate Change

Some Climate Shocks Can Increase the Likelihood of War

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Researchers warn against oversimplifying climate change’s role in conflicts. But some conditions can increase the likelihood of violence, a new study finds.

New research reinforces scientific evidence that climate extremes can raise the risk of armed conflict, especially when drought conditions pass critical thresholds in vulnerable regions, including parts of Africa and Southeast Asia.

Some Climate Shocks Can Increase the Likelihood of War

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