Tuesday, April 7, 2026

U.S. has cost the world more than $1.9 trillion in climate damages since 1990,...

"As the evidence mounts and the record of U.S. obstructionism in the climate context is established, I don’t think it and other countries will be able to escape their liability in perpetuity.”

Glyphosate found in more than 80% of U.S. urine samples

Glyphosate was listed as a probable human carcinogen by the World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer in 2015. 

Feeling defeated by the Supreme Court’s EPA ruling? There’s still a lot we can...

America’s highest court has limited the EPA’s authority to regulate power plant emissions.

EU votes to label gas and nuclear power investments as ‘green’

"Russia’s war against Ukraine is a war paid for by climate-heating fossil fuels and the European parliament just voted to boost billions of funding to fossil gas from Russia."

BP exploited Mexican communities hoping to benefit from carbon credits: report

A report published this month in Bloomberg Green said oil and gas company BP has been buying carbon credits from Mexican villages below market value, raising questions about the carbon credit market’s viability as a tool for transitioning companies to green practices.

Extreme life

Or World War III (IV and V), climate-style.

New California law could eliminate 23 million tons of plastic in 10 years

“Today we make history; tomorrow we focus on ensuring our SB 54 goals to reduce plastic pollution are met.”

EPA likely underestimating amount of toxic forever chemicals in US water: Analysis

"The EPA is doing the bare minimum it can and that's putting people's health at risk," said the policy director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.

The Supreme Court’s EPA decision could hamper regulator’s ability to protect the public

The agency will still be allowed to regulate many forms of air pollution, but would need explicit direction from Congress on how to tackle some of the worst aspects of climate change and other pressing issues.

‘Win for wildlife’ as federal court restores endangered species protections gutted by Trump

"In the midst of a global extinction crisis, the court's decision to vacate the rules will help ensure that imperiled species receive the protections they desperately need," said one advocate.