Longleaf Pine Restoration—a Major Climate Effort in the South—Curbs Its Ambitions to Meet Harsh Realities A Public-Private Partnership Confronts the Challenges of Nature-Based Solutions, Including Urban Growth, Logging Pressures and a Warming Planet By Marianne Lavelle, and Sarah Whites-Koditschek and Dennis Pillion of AL.com
As Financial Turmoil Threatens Plans for an Alabama Wood Pellet Plant, Advocates Question Its Climate and Community Benefits By Lee Hedgepeth
Q&A: Catherine Coleman Flowers Talks COP28, Rural Alabama, and the Path Toward a ‘Just Transition’ By Lee Hedgepeth
In Florida, Gen Z Activists Step Into the Fight Against Sugarcane Burning By Michelle Mairena and Kyndall Hubbard, Youthcast Media Group
Alabama Wood Pellet Mill Seeks Millions in Climate Funds, but Critics Say It Won’t Cut CO2 By Dennis Pillion, AL.com
A Known Risk: How Carbon Stored Underground Could Find Its Way Back Into the Atmosphere By Terry L. Jones and Pam Radtke, Floodlight
Little Publicized but Treacherous, Methane From Coal Mines Upends the Lives of West Virginia Families By James Bruggers
In the Everglades, a Clash Portrayed as ‘Science vs. Politics’ Pits a Leading Scientist Against His Former Employer By Amy Green
EPA Proposes to Expand its Regulations on Dumps of Toxic Waste From Burning Coal By James Bruggers, Amy Green
Amy Green Joins Inside Climate News to Cover Florida; Regional and Local Networks Expand in the Southeast, Midwest, Texas and Mountain West By ICN Editors
Kentucky Residents Angered by US Forest Service Logging Plan That Targets Mature Trees By Marianne Lavelle
On the Frontlines in a ‘Cancer Alley,’ Black Women Inspired by Faith Are Powering the Environmental Justice Movement By James Bruggers
Hurricanes Ian and Nicole Left Devastating Flooding in Central Florida. Will it Happen Again? By Amy Green, WMFE
Drowning Deaths Last Summer From Flooding in Eastern Kentucky’s Coal Country Linked to Poor Strip-Mine Reclamation By James Bruggers