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Advances in knowledge about climate change and the effects of warming on our world and way of life.

The steady increase in harmful algal blooms has spurred residents and officials around Owasco Lake to develop proposed enforceable rules to minimize the phosphorous and nitrogen runoff from farms in their watershed. Credit: New York Department of Environmental Conservation

Algal Blooms Ravaged New York’s Finger Lakes During Final Week of August

By Peter Mantius

A hiker admires the sunrise view from near the Mount Whitney summit after a scary scamper along a narrow rock ridge. Credit: Bing Lin/Inside Climate News

Can the ‘Magic’ and ‘Angels’ That Make Long Trails Mystical for Hikers Also Conjure Solutions to Environmental Challenges?

By Bing Lin

A firefighters extinguishes flames near State Road 172 as the Park Fire burns on Aug. 7 in Mill Creek, California. Credit: Ethan Swope/Getty Images

In the Park Fire, an Indigenous Cultural Fire Practitioner Sees Beyond Destruction

By Sarah Hopkins

UC Berkeley students participate in a class at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Emeryville, California. Credit: Thor Swift/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

New Grant Will Further Research to Identify and Generate Biomass in California’s North San Joaquin Valley

By Ruchi Shahagadkar

University of Maryland graduate research assistants work on an elastocaloric cooling system prototype at the the school’s Center for Environmental Energy Engineering. Credit: Courtesy of CEEE

University of Maryland Researchers Are Playing a Major Role in the Future of Climate-Friendly Air Conditioning

By Hannah Marszalek

A view of the Pantanal wetlands in Brazil. New research shows a large chunk of global methane emissions are from rotting vegetation in tropical wetlands. Credit: Carl de Souza/AFP via Getty Images

Surging Methane Emissions Could Be a Sign of a Major Climate Shift

By Bob Berwyn

Farmworkers pick strawberries on a field in Oxnard, California. Growers applied more than 60 million pounds of the fumigant 1,3-dichloropropene on crops such as strawberries to kill nematodes and other soil-dwelling organisms in 2018, the most recent year data is available. Credit: Mel Melcon/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

EPA Thought Industry-Funded Scientists Could Support Its Conclusion That a Long-Regulated Pesticide Is Not a Cancer Risk

By Liza Gross

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres visits Tonga for the Pacific Islands Forum Leaders Meeting. Credit: United Nations/Kiara Worth

Pacific Islands Climate Risk Growing as Sea Level Rise Accelerates

By Bob Berwyn

Glacial water streams down rocks in California’s Hoover Wilderness south of Leavitt Lake. Credit: Bing Lin/Inside Climate News

Water Issues Confronting Hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail Trickle Down Into the Rest of California

By Bing Lin

The Seagrass Species That Is Not So Slowly Taking Over the World

By Bing Lin

A member of the Coral Restoration Foundation brings up threatened coral transplants from the Florida Keys waters for safe keeping on land during a marine heatwave on July 24, 2023 near Islamorada, Florida. Credit: Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

New Federal Report Details More of 2023’s Extreme Climate Conditions

By Bob Berwyn

Ecologist Hugh Safford holds a sugar pine cone for size comparison on the Pacific Crest Trail near Quincy, California. Credit: Bing Lin/Inside Climate News

A Path Through Scorched Earth Teaches How a Fire Deficit Helped Fuel California’s Conflagrations

By Bing Lin

With the Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability, Harvard established an entire school devoted to the climate crisis. Credit: Harvard University

The Aspen Institute Is Calling for a Systemic Approach to Climate Education at the University Level

By Caroline Marshall Reinhart

People cast their fishing lines into the Colorado River in Glenwood Springs, Colorado. Credit: Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Springtime Rain Crucial for Getting Wintertime Snowmelt to the Colorado River, Study Finds

By Jake Bolster

More than 47,000 aspen trees, all connected by a single root system, make up the Kebler Pass aspen stand in the Colorado high country. Credit: EcoFlight

What Conservation Coalitions Have Learned from an Aspen Tree

By Zoë Rom

Students study in the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. Credit: Mark Makela/Getty Images

How Wharton and Other Top Business Schools Are Training MBAs for the Climate Economy

By Mathilde Augustin

The Pacific Crest Trail footpath snakes along a mountain ridge south of Donner Summit, California, as a hiker climbs up the trail. Credit: Bing Lin/Inside Climate News

First Snow, then Heat Interrupt a Hike From Mexico to Canada, as Climate Complicates an Iconic Adventure

By Bing Lin

People walk through a flooded street caused by the rain and storm surge from Hurricane Debby on August 5 in Cedar Key, Florida. Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

NOAA Affirms Expectations for Extraordinarily Active Hurricane Season

By Amy Green

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