All Environment
- First LookLas Vegas goes solar: good news for some, bad for others
Las Vegas this week became the home of the largest solar installation in the nation, and not everyone is celebrating.
- How satellites are helping us combat algal blooms
Algal blooms afflict oceans and lakes alike, but a new weapon is joining the fight: satellites.
- How the Northeast can address its gypsy moth problem
New England residents are currently contending with the worst gypsy moth outbreak since 1989, when their fuzzy larvae defoliated more than 12 million acres of trees.
- Found near Los Angeles, a quintet of baby mountain lions
Five kittens were found in two dens in the the Santa Susana Mountains.
- The Democrats' climate change conundrum
A large majority of Democrats are concerned about climate change. But they're split over how radical the remedies should be.
- EU declines to completely ban ivory trade. Will elephants pay the price?
Looking ahead to the expiration of the ban on global ivory sales in 2017, Europe says it wants to preserve the loopholes.
- First LookHow Florida governor plans to fight algae on beaches
As the goopy, green algae infestation continues to cover south Florida waters, the governor calls on lawmakers and the federal government to help.
- Scientists may have solved a mystery: Why is Antarctic sea ice growing?
The small minority of climate change models accurately predicted the expansion of Antarctic sea ice, and now scientists think they know why.
- Florida man arrested with 107 sea turtle eggs
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission says the arrest could help protect an 'imperiled species.' All six species of sea turtle found in the US are threatened or endangered.
- Why big solar is now cheaper than residential rooftop solar
The success of large-scale solar has raised questions about the wisdom of continuing incentives for rooftop installations, which remain far more expensive than most other forms of electricity.
- How can industrial-scale agriculture reduce its environmental footprint?
In a new report by Environment America, an advocacy group, five agribusiness giants are put under the spotlight for their impact on US waterways.
- First LookHow the Parks Service is using DNA evidence to exonerate bears
When bears attack humans, wildlife officials have to put them down. Sometimes, however, the wrong bear ends up in the crosshairs.
- Europe climate policy in doubt after Brexit vote
After Britain's vote to leave EU, it will take time actually pull out of membership. What's already here is uncertainty over ratification of a climate treaty, other steps to reduce carbon emissions, and the fate of British environmental laws.
- Scientists plant kelp as way to offset effects of ocean acidification
Kelp has the potential for taking up a significant amount of carbon out of seawater. Can it help enough to protect Washington State's $184 million shellfish industry?
- First LookShould state or feds fix toxic algae blooms? Why Florida can't decide
Florida officials, including Gov. Rick Scott, are calling for federal action to stop the release of pollutants. But the algal blooms may have other causes.
- Why Exxon Mobil is now lobbying for a carbon tax
The world's largest publicly owned company is lobbying other American energy firms to get behind it.
- Bear kills bicyclist in Montana: Why are grizzly attacks on the rise?
It was the seventh grizzly fatality in the Northern Rockies since 2010.
- This El Niño season could spark intense wildfires in Amazon
Following the recent El Niño event, conditions in the Amazon are drier than the start of any dry season since 2002. While that is cause for concern, scientists also say their tools for predicting, and thus managing, wildfires are becoming more sophisticated.
- Could Brexit sink the global climate accord?
Climate scientists and advocates are worried that Britain's exit from the Eurpean Union will complicate the process of ratifying the Paris Agreement and may install a government that will roll back crucial environmental policies and regulations.
- Buoys in the deep geared to listen for singing whales near shipping lanes
Scientists hope that by monitoring the presence of whales in real-time off the coast of New England they can protect them from colliding with shipping vessels.