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Thursday, 27 September 2018
Energy and Environment: Across the Arctic, lakes are leaking dangerous greenhouse gases. And one lake is behaving very strangely
EPA orders extensive cleanup of radioactive waste site near St. Louis; The Energy 202: Republicans rev up calls to rewrite Endangered Species Act
With Chris Mooney
Across the Arctic, lakes are leaking dangerous greenhouse gases. And one lake is behaving very strangely
Maybe it's just an anomaly – or maybe it's something worse.
By Chris Mooney, Jonathan Newton, Joe Moore, Karly Domb Sadof, John Muyskens and Monica Ulmanu •
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EPA orders extensive cleanup of radioactive waste site near St. Louis
The West Lake Landfill contains thousands of tons of radioactive material from the World War II-era Manhattan Project that was dumped at the site in the 1970s.
By Brady Dennis •
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The Energy 202: Republicans rev up calls to rewrite Endangered Species Act
They're spurred by recent court decisions about grizzly bears and gray wolves.
By Dino Grandoni •
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Climate change is destroying our national parks at an alarming rate, study finds
Imagine Joshua Tree without Joshua trees. Or Glacier National Park without glaciers.
By Alex Horton •
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The Energy 202: North Carolina floods thrust Trump coal deregulation back into spotlight
The Trump administration has sought to relax rules on the way coal ash is stored.
By Dino Grandoni •
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Dam breach sends toxic coal ash flowing into a major North Carolina river
Fears about the situation at Duke's L.V. Sutton power plant near Wilmington have been growing since before Hurricane Florence made landfall.
By Brady Dennis, Steven Mufson and Juliet Eilperin •
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A land transformed by water: North Carolina, before and after Hurricane Florence
Entire communities, including housing developments, shopping centers, farms, forests and roads, are engulfed by water.
By Jason Samenow •
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At this rate, Earth risks sea level rise of 20 to 30 feet, historical analysis shows
New research finds that a vast area of Antarctica retreated when Earth's temperatures weren't much warmer than they are now.
By Chris Mooney •
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