All Environment
- First LookPrecision, care, respect: Challenges behind Maui wildfire cleanupAfter the Aug. 8 Maui wildfire, authorities have begun removing hazardous waste and an estimated 400,000 to 700,000 tons of debris. Cleanup efforts will be costly and timely, and executed with care due to the cultural significance of the area.
- Points of ProgressSchooling the teachers, from California to CambodiaProgress roundup: A pipeline for early childhood education teachers is boosting ranks. In Cambodia, a World Bank program impacted 450,000 students.
- First LookPower lines sparked Maui fire. But the area was overgrown for years.Investigators hunting for the origin of last month鈥檚 Maui wildfire are focusing on聽an overgrown gully beneath Hawaiian Electric Co. power lines. The company denies responsibility, though some allege that its right-of-way went untrimmed for years.
- First LookTeens to lead Europe's first climate change human rights caseA group of young Portuguese activists plan聽to take 32 European governments to court for what they say is a failure to adequately address human-caused climate change. It鈥檚 the first climate change case to be filed with the European Court of Human Rights.
- FocusRebuilding after wildfire: Help is scarcest for those who need it mostAfter a major wildfire, low-income residents are the ones who find insurance and loans hardest to access. That鈥檚 a challenge for the whole community.
- Miyawaki: A little forest with a towering task (video)A Japanese method of planting fast-growing native forests is spreading worldwide. How it brings 鈥済rounded hope鈥 to one of its U.S. practitioners, and nurtures a sense of community around its sites.
- First LookLouisiana鈥檚 鈥榥ew normal鈥: Record-breaking wildfires scorch the stateLouisiana has had a record-breaking wildfire season, exacerbated by extreme heat and drought. The largest wildfire, which has been burning for almost a month, has scorched more than 31,000 acres 鈥 more burned land than the state usually has in a year.
- Points of ProgressFor safer drinking water, the ingenuity of simple solutionsProgress roundup: Researchers develop an elegantly simple filter for microplastics, and a nonprofit is giving access to potable water to millions in East Africa. 聽
- First LookMarch to End Fossil Fuels: 75,000 protestors descend on NYCAs many as 75,000 people in New York City have begun a week of demonstrations seeking to end the use of fossil fuels and demand policy change. The march marked the beginning of New York鈥檚 Climate Week, where world leaders are gathering for a U.N. summit.
- They moved to Vermont for climate safety. Then came floods.Extreme weather events have been persistent and global. They are bringing home the effects of climate change, even in areas of relative safety.
- First LookNo more to-go cups? Starbucks to discontinue disposables by 2030.Starbucks plans to discontinue disposable cups by 2030 to reach its environmental goals of decreasing waste. Its store at Arizona State University has been reusing plastic cups with success, but can those practices be replicated at stores worldwide?
- First LookNew environmental ruling shifts stewardship back to tribes and statesThe Biden administration鈥檚 decision will give back power to states and tribes to review federally regulated projects that could potentially pollute waterways. Proponents of the ruling claim it will help end 鈥渞egulatory chaos.鈥
- First LookNew England, already saturated by heavy rain, awaits Hurricane LeeCoastal New England is under a tropical storm watch in anticipation of Hurricane Lee making landfall later this week. The region braces for another storm as it still deals with the aftermath of extreme weather, including recent flash flooding and sinkholes.
- If you map it, they will come: The effort to chart the seafloorJournalist聽Laura聽Trethewey plunges into the intense race to map the oceans 鈥 and the potential for exploitation of one of the planet鈥檚 few remaining frontiers.聽
- Helping bays become 鈥榓 better spot鈥 for oysters 鈥 and farmersA partnership between conservationists and oyster farmers is expanding after a promising start.聽
- First LookStunned Libya reels from flash flood, with 10,000 reportedly missingMediterranean storm Daniel caused floodwaters to rise and break through dams in Libya鈥檚 eastern city of Derna, smashing through the city, and washing away entire neighborhoods. An estimated聽700 people have been killed and 10,000 are reported missing.聽
- For community built atop former landfill, a long wait for justiceThe Gordon Plaza community in New Orleans, built on a former landfill, symbolizes how the legal 鈥渂urden of proof鈥 is often stacked against people harmed by pollution.
- Points of ProgressSignaling what matters: Indigenous representation, free school lunchProgress roundup: Brazil鈥檚 census finds more Indigenous people with new counting methods. And Africa鈥檚 largest school meals program aims to fight hunger.
- First LookBiden cancels remaining Alaska fossil fuel leases amid criticismThe remaining seven oil and gas leases in Alaska鈥檚 Arctic National Wildlife Refuge have been canceled. The move comes after the Biden administration drew criticism from environmental groups when it approved the Willow oil project in the petroleum reserve.
- In Pictures: Making a living on the world鈥檚 largest desert lakeMaking a living has become increasingly difficult around Kenya鈥檚 Lake Turkana. Adapting and sharing, these pastoralists hold on.聽