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Election 2024: What's at Stake for the Climate

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Ongoing series, packages, and multi-part investigations.

Benno, 3, and Theo Schmitt, 5, climb on ropes in the Play Valley at ResilienCity Park on Aug. 27 in Hoboken, New Jersey. Credit: Caroline Gutman/Inside Climate News

Climate Swing: Will parks be out of bounds as climate change worsens?

Melissa Krupa’s Socastee home after a flood in February 2021, weeks before the first grants to start a buyout program were approved. Credit: Courtesy of Melissa Krupa

Flooding the Market: Climate change and coastal threats in South Carolina

An aerial view of a snag forest near the PCT south of Quincy. Credit: Bing Lin/Inside Climate News

Miles to Go: Exploring the impacts of climate change on the Pacific Crest Trail

Anival Tanguila, a Quichua leader from the Corazón del Oriente Community, stands next to decommissioned Perenco oil infrastructure in the Ecuadorian Amazon on March 22, 2023. Credit: Katie Surma/Inside Climate News

Cashing Out: The secretive system disrupting climate action and forcing big payouts to fossil fuel companies

The home that exploded in Adger is one of dozens that Oak Grove Mine operators say could be impacted by subsidence. Credit: Lee Hedgepeth/Inside Climate News

Undermined: From cracked foundations to explosive gases, the costly disruptions of longwall mining

About a dozen vintage Scout sport utility vehicles stood at the entrance to the Feb. 15 groundbreaking at the Blythewood, S.C. site where Volkswagen is investing $2 billion to resurrect the brand as an electric vehicle. Credit: Scout Motors

Politically Charged: How U.S. polarization threatens the EV future

Workers pick strawberries in a field unaffected by flooding near Aromas, southeast of Pajaro, on the north side of the Pajaro River. Credit: Liza Gross

Indigenous, Essential, Exploited: California policies leave Indigenous farmworkers particularly vulnerable to climate disasters

Dairy cows gather at a farm in Visalia, Calif. on July 5, 2022. Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Milking It: How Big Ag has avoided reporting the largest source of methane emissions in the nation

Judith Kimerling kneeling on pipelines above a drilling waste pit in the Ecuadorian Amazon in July 1990. Credit: Courtesy of Judith Kimerling

The Education of Judith Kimerling: An American lawyer’s epic struggle to stop expanding oil operations harming Indigenous peoples in Ecuador’s Amazon

Jeanette Toomer reads aloud from her book, Precious Struggles: The Making of a 21st Century Woman, in New York's Central Park near her home. Credit: Michael Kodas

Dereliction of Beauty: How lax regulation of beauty care products victimizes women of color

Harm City: The quest for environmental justice and climate adaptation in Baltimore

Axed: How the U.S. Forest Service Depletes the Carbon Sink by Logging Mature Tree Stands

State of Denial: How Texas' environmental regulators enable big oil and other polluters

A thermal image of SF6-containing electrical equipment at a Duke Energy substation. The image does not show any leaks. Credit: Phil McKenna

The Immortals: Greenhouse Gases That Live Forever

Something in the Water: Regulators Say Growing Crops With Oil Wastewater Is Safe, but Evidence Is Scant

A detail of the pilot carbon dioxide capture plant is pictured at Amager Bakke waste incinerator in Copenhagen on June 24, 2021. Credit: Ida Guldbaek Arentsen/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP via Getty Images

Pipe Dreams: Is Carbon Capture a Climate Solution or a Dangerous Distraction?

Villager Caroline is seen in a withered maize crops field in Kidemu in Kilifi County, Kenya, March 23, 2022. Scattered on the five-acre farm in Bandari village, Kidemu sub-location in Kenya's coastal Kilifi County, were withered maize crops. Adam Ndamunga, an officer with Kenya National Drought Management Authority NDMA in Kilifi, said the drought situation in the region started in August 2021 and has been progressing due to inadequate rains. The United Nations relief agency said the Horn of Africa is experiencing one of its worst droughts in recent history, with more than 13 million people severely food insecure in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia. Credit: Dong Jianghui/Xinhua via Getty Images

Food Shocks: Climate Change and the Coming Famines

Signs opposing the solar project are plentiful all around Williamsport Ohio. July 12, 2022.

Solar Opposites: A Standoff Over Renewable Energy in Rural America

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