Moving South, Black Americans Are Weathering Climate Change The desire for a better quality of life is pushing Black people toward the epicenter of climate disasters and racism. By Adam Mahoney, Capital B
Public Funding Gave This Alabama Woman Shelter From the Storm. Then Her Neighbor Fenced Her Out By Lee Hedgepeth
US Regions Will Suffer a Stunning Variety of Climate-Caused Disasters, Report Finds By Nicholas Kusnetz, Lee Hedgepeth, Amy Green, Phil McKenna, Dylan Baddour, Aydali Campa, Wyatt Myskow, Marianne Lavelle and Kristoffer Tigue
Report Charts Climate Change’s Growing Impact in the US, While Stressing Benefits of Action By Marianne Lavelle, Katie Surma, Kiley Price, Nicholas Kusnetz
Environmental Justice a Key Theme Throughout Biden’s National Climate Assessment By Kristoffer Tigue, Georgina Gustin, Liza Gross, Victoria St. Martin
New Study Warns of an Imminent Spike of Planetary Warming and Deepens Divides Among Climate Scientists By Bob Berwyn
Q&A: Rich and Poor Nations Have One More Chance to Come to Terms Over a Climate Change ‘Loss and Damage’ Fund Interview by Jenni Doering, “Living on Earth”
As Alabama Judge Orders a Takeover of a Failing Water System, Frustrated Residents Demand Federal Intervention By Lee Hedgepeth
Scientists Disagree About Drivers of September’s Global Temperature Spike, but It Has Most of Them Worried By Bob Berwyn
At a ‘Climate Convergence,’ Pennsylvania Environmental Activists Urge Gov. Shapiro and State Lawmakers to Do More to Curb Emissions By Jon Hurdle