Propelling this promise with the force of her newfound celebrity, Ocasio-Cortez has transformed the climate debate almost overnight.
Combs, Trump’s nominee to be assistant secretary of the Interior, is just one of the grifters in the Trump administration.
Happy ending? Not so fast. Scott Pruitt may be gone, but his spirit still haunts the EPA.
A rule published in 2015 under Obama could have restricted pollution from chemical fertilizers and pesticides.
A report by a private research company found that U.S. emissions, which amount to one-sixth of the planet's, didn't fall in 2018 but instead skyrocketed.
Aurelia Skipwith, Trump’s nominee to head our nation’s Fish and Wildlife Service, is a Kentucky attorney and former Monsanto employee with ties to a one-time Montana state lawmaker with connections to former Interior Secretary Ryan ...
Ryan Zinke is out as secretary of the Interior, but in his last days in office he tried to suppress what we can learn about the destruction Trump is doing to our nation’s public lands.
“Federal defendants do not have adequate time or space to address every formulation of the arguments,” Williams wrote.
Climate change needs ever-increasing attention. It didn't get it from mainstream media in 2018.
The land, most now scheduled to be sold in February and March, is home to the imperiled greater sage grouse, a ground-nesting bird known for its distinctive mating dance.
Biologist Billy Justus said the agency doesn’t have the funding to do the research to figure out whose pollution caused the algae to grow.
The Trump administration wants to bury science and hide how mining, drilling and logging on public lands devastate our precious natural spaces.
Gray wolves have been listed as endangered or threatened in the lower 48 states since the 1960s, but the lame-duck Republican House wants to strip federal protections from most wolves.
“Climate change is already underway in Alaska, and this lease sale will only make it worse,” said Miyoko Sakashita of the Center for Biological Diversity.
And rather than offer any real plans or words of comfort, Zinke opted to take cheap shots at political adversaries.