A renewed withdrawal from the Paris Agreement and avowedly pro-fossil fuel policies will heat the climate and harm people around the world for decades to come, experts warn.
The latest United States withdrawal from international efforts to slow global warming feels old hat to many long-time policy experts, who say that while the move will make global climate action more challenging, it will, in the long run, hurt the American economy and American consumers more than anything else.
Trump Moves Again to Exit the Paris Agreement. Here’s What That Means
Climate Change
The Fight Over Logging on U.S. Public Lands Isn’t Done Yet
Despite an Oregon court ruling in January invalidating a rule that enabled clear cutting, it’s far from the last salvo in the battle for how to fight fires or manage forests—and who can profit from it.
From our collaborating partner Living on Earth, public radio’s environmental news magazine, an interview by host Steve Curwood with Timothy Ingalsbee, executive director of Firefighters United for Safety, Ethics and Ecology.
Climate Change
Pennsylvania Publishes Long-Awaited Study on Radioactivity in Landfill Runoff
The state concluded there is “no current cause for concern.” Experts worried about the long-term impacts of fracking waste say more research is required.
A decade ago, Pennsylvania’s Department of Environmental Protection published a study on radioactivity in the oil and gas industry, motivated by fears that increasing volumes of toxic fracking waste could pose risks to the environment and public health. That study concluded, in part, that more research was needed—especially regarding the impacts on landfills where this waste is disposed.
Pennsylvania Publishes Long-Awaited Study on Radioactivity in Landfill Runoff
Climate Change
Summer in March? Unusual Heat Wave Descends on Already Parched Western U.S.
The heat wave could further lower water availability in the region, which has seen staggeringly low levels of snowpack this year.
An early-season heat wave is descending across the Western United States, likely to bring record-shattering temperatures to much of the region.
Summer in March? Unusual Heat Wave Descends on Already Parched Western U.S.
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