(Angela Ponce/For The Washington Post) A Peruvian farmer is suing one of Europe's biggest emitters. The case could set a precedent for holding polluters accountable for harm to the planet. By Sarah Kaplan ● Read more » | | In the early 20th century, an exotic fungus nearly drove the American chestnut out of existence. Researchers say it's now functionally extinct. By Dino Grandoni ● Read more » | | Inspection agencies have been gutted. The courts are lenient. Appeals can grind on forever. Deforesters keep deforesting, because they know they can. By Terrence McCoy ● Read more » | | Climate change has set in motion massive ice losses that couldn't be halted even if the world stopped emitting greenhouse gases today, according to a new study. By Chris Mooney ● Read more » | | In Port Arthur, Tex., and around the country, environmental justice activists see danger as the new climate law pairs renewable development with fossil fuels. By Sarah Kaplan ● Read more » | | The water crisis in Jackson, Miss., portends what could happen in other U.S. communities, as climate change pushes under-resourced and overburdened water systems to the brink. By Brady Dennis and Sarah Kaplan ● Read more » | | These types of compounds continue to turn up in drinking water, cosmetics, fabrics and food packaging used by millions of Americans. By Dino Grandoni ● Read more » | | Amid a climate-policy bonanza, California passed a bill to give an incentive for living car-free. By Shannon Osaka ● Read more » | | As Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) makes her pitch for a new climate bill, it raises a question: If Democrats cannot successfully sell their environmental agenda amid a cascade of climate disasters this summer, then when? By Maxine Joselow ● Read more » | | One catch at a time, Lefteris Arapakis is cleaning the Mediterranean. By Michael Birnbaum ● Read more » | | "The destruction and losses are so huge, it's something we have never seen before," a local official said. By Shaiq Hussain, Haq Nawaz Khan and Susannah George ● Read more » | | La Niรฑa, a large low-pressure system over the region and climate change have pushed Pakistan to its worst flooding in at least a decade. By Kasha Patel ● Read more » | | The deadly floods Pakistan is suffering raise a difficult question: Who should pay for the damage climate change is causing in the developing world? By Shannon Osaka ● Read more » | | The beloved cactus, nearly 100 years older than Arizona itself, weathered generations of storms and droughts, until it toppled to the ground after August rains. By Derek Hawkins ● Read more » | | Los Angeles and Sacramento are included in excessive heat warnings through the Labor Day weekend as a heat wave grips California and the U.S. West. By Matthew Cappucci and Jason Samenow ● Read more » | | A paper in the journal Nature on the damage caused by climate change brings into relief the threat that higher temperatures pose on the lives and livelihoods of people at home and abroad. By Dino Grandoni and Brady Dennis ● Read more » | | Ecuador is investigating the deaths of four endangered Galรกpagos giant tortoises. Authorities fear they were killed and eaten. By Rachel Pannett ● Read more » | | As Russia cuts gas flows, the U.S. and Germany have raised a fraught question: Could the Dutch keep drilling for Europe's greater good? By Anthony Faiola ● Read more » | | It's a rare opportunity to study never-before-seen relics, but it comes at an enormous ecological cost and sets off a race against time for researchers. By Derek Hawkins ● Read more » | | Amid a worsening drought, Britain's environment chief is urging people to embrace the idea of "toilet-to-tap" recycling systems. By Rachel Pannett ● Read more » | | As climate change causes summer temperatures to soar, heat-focused officials are working to adapt their cities for a harsher future. By Claire Parker ● Read more » | | The global reevaluation shows the extraordinary degree to which the war in Ukraine is reshaping long-held positions about nuclear power. By Michael Birnbaum and Michelle Ye Hee Lee ● Read more » | | The most exceptional temperatures in the nation range from a scorching 130 degrees in Death Valley to a numbing minus-56 degrees in Minnesota. Analysis ● By Jacob Feuerstein ● Read more » | | The season has been near record-slow thus far, and some forecasters are dialing back their predictions. By Matthew Cappucci ● Read more » | | | | |
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