Canary Media: Greece Set to Eliminate Last Coal-fired Plants and Most of It's Coal Mines
Just over a decade ago, more than half the country’s electricity was produced by burning through mountains of lignite, the lowest-grade form of coal. Now, if all goes according to plan, Greece aims to shutter its last two coal-fired power plants next year and stop producing coal from most of its mines, including one that is among the largest in Europe.
Midpeninsula Regional Open Space: New Acquisition Helps Grow the Greenbelt
Dec 4 - Midpen approved the acquisition of a property that supports the critical connection between two of the highest peaks in the Santa Cruz Mountains: Mount Umunhum and Loma Prieta. This purchase not only preserves open space, it forges a connection for wildlife and future trails high above Silicon Valley.
LinkedIn, Oliver Bolton: Britain bans oil and gas exploration in new fields
Up to 1 to 2 billion tonnes of future CO2 may have been prevented by ending new offshore oil and gas exploration. One of the most significant climate decisions taken by any major economy in years. The UK government has confirmed that it will stop issuing new offshore exploration licences as part of its North Sea Future Plan.
Canary Media: The startup trying to make affordable home batteries happen
One Pila Mesh Home battery can power a typical refrigerator for 32 hours, or double that for customers that tack on an “expansion pack.” Pila’s 1.6-kilowatt-hour batteries retail for $1,299, which is more than what you’d spend for another portable battery with roughly equivalent storage capacity.
Happy Eco News: Project Nexus - California Solar Canals Could Save 63 Billion Gallons of Water Annually
California has launched an innovative project that could save up to 63 billion gallons of water annually while generating clean electricity. Project Nexus places solar panels directly over irrigation canals in the Central Valley, creating the first system of its kind in the United States.
Anthropocene: What escapes the lint trap? Dryers emerge as overlooked microfiber polluters…with a simple fix
Microfibers are a type of microplastic that comes from textiles. They have been found in the ocean, on remote mountaintops, and in human lung, placenta, and even brain tissue. Wear and tear from laundering is a major source of microfibers, which get washed down the drain from laundry machines and blown out into the air through dryer vents, too small to be caught by standard lint traps.
Mexico’s Bold Leap Toward Natural Farming — A Global Wake-Up Call
In a landmark decision that’s reverberating across the agricultural world, Mexico has replaced 16 million tonnes of genetically modified corn with native varieties and banned glyphosate, a toxic herbicide linked to environmental and health risks. This isn’t just policy it’s a powerful return to ancestral wisdom, ecological integrity, and food sovereignty.
Wired: The Oceans Are Going to Rise—but When?
The uniquely vulnerable West Antarctic Ice Sheet holds enough water to raise global sea levels by 5 meters. But when that will happen — and how fast — is anything but settled. In May 2014, NASA announced at a press conference that a portion of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet appeared to have reached a point of irreversible retreat.
Inside Climate News: Texas Workers Keep Dying in the Heat
Heat is the No. 1 weather-related killer worldwide. The International Labour Organization — a UN agency —estimated that more than 2.4 billion workers were exposed to excessive heat globally in 2020. Local and national governments have failed to catch up to the risk, which climate change is worsening.
High Country News: Sea Otters To Get Another Chance In Oregon and Northern California
In 2024, the Siletz Tribe and its partners got a major boost in the effort to reintroduce sea otters: through the Biden administration’s America the Beautiful grants they received a $1.56 million grant over three years to reintroduce the species to Oregon and Northern California. The return of sea otters (xvlh-t'vsh in the native Siltz language) to the coast of Oregon will not only impact the broader ecosystem of animal and kelp forest life, it will also affect
SFGate: Tule Elk Reintroduced To Land Recently Returned To The Tule River Tribe
Tule elk are once again roaming the Sierra Nevada foothills southwest of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks after a historic land return that Gov. Gavin Newsom is calling the largest of its kind in the region’s history. The 17,030 acres made up of two former ranch properties were recently returned to the Tule River Indian Tribe.
Inside Climate News: A New Unifying Issue - Just About Everyone Hates Data Centers
Recent election results and evidence from states show misgivings about the growth of AI and the ramifications for energy costs and the environment. For people who live near proposed data centers, there is a sense of powerlessness, which Inside Climate News has documented across the country, including the backlash to a plan for a huge data center in Bessemer, Alabama.
The Optimist Daily: Brazil expands Indigenous territories as COP30 protests spotlight the stakes
Brazil, a country at the heart of the world’s climate future, has taken a major step by creating 10 newly recognized Indigenous territories. The announcement came at a moment of heightened emotions and protests both inside and outside the COP30 conference, underscoring how deeply land rights and climate justice are intertwined.
Brightline Defense: Senator Lena Gonzalez Named 2025 Offshore Wind Champion
A broad coalition of EJ, environmental, and labor advocates, as well as port and industry representatives, honored Senator Lena Gonzalez (CA-33) as the 2025 Offshore Wind Champion, recognizing her steadfast commitment to advancing California’s clean energy goals through responsible offshore wind development. The coalition praised Senator Gonzalez’s pivotal role in securing Proposition 4 funding to modernize and electrify California’s ports, investments that will position the state as a national hub for offshore wind. More of this STORY.
Environmental Working Group: Tyson Foods agrees to stop making ‘net-zero’ and ‘climate-smart beef’ claims
Nov 17 - The Environmental Working Group has reached a settlement in its lawsuit alleging that Tyson Foods’ promises to reach “net-zero” greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and sell “climate-smart” beef were not backed by sufficient actions to make those goals credible. Under the settlement, Tyson will refrain from making these environmental claims for five years..
Center For Biological Diversity: Pacific Humpbacks Gain a Team to Fight Entanglements
The National Marine Fisheries Service finally announced Oct 31 that it will form a federal task force to curb Pacific humpback whale entanglements in fishing gear. Dozens of humpbacks are entangled off the Pacific Coast every year.
Earthjustice: Trump’s EPA Is Trying to Gut the Protections That Keep Our Drinking Water Clean
Nov 18 - Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers proposed a rule that would end federal protections for many wetlands and streams in the U.S., imperiling critical habitats and the clean drinking water of millions of Americans. The new rule could strip safeguards from more than 80% of all wetlands nationwide.
Optimist Daily: Washington voters uphold groundbreaking climate law, a victory for climate action
On November 5, Washington voters made an important decision for the future of climate action by deciding to uphold the state’s Climate Commitment Act (CCA), one of the nation’s most ambitious climate laws. This vote marked a huge loss for Republican efforts to dismantle the act, which Governor Jay Inslee signed into law in 2021.
Center For Biological Diversity: How the AI Boom Threatens to Entrench Fossil Fuels and Compromise Climate Goals
Surging electricity demand driven by artificial intelligence is putting humanity’s climate goals out of reach, extending the life of fossil fuels and driving up emissions in the U.S. power sector while contributing to deadly extreme weather, according to two new reports. With power- and water-hungry data centers forecasted to come online at staggering speeds to serve big tech companies’ seemingly bottomless appetite for AI infrastructure..
Mongabay: New directory helps donors navigate the complex world of global reforestation
Nov 12 - To answer the donors and funders question of how to identify effective reforestation organizations, Prof Karen Holl's lab at UCSC evaluated groups across four categories: permanence, ecological, social and financial, each backed by scientific literature on best practices. Holl and UCSC postdoctoral researcher Spencer Schubert spent more than a year evaluating “intermediary organizations,” the major groups that channel funding and resources to local tree-planting projects around the world.