The Worth of Water as the River Runs Low
As the Colorado River runs low, so too do rivers, lakes and tributaries around the world. It’s time for action, not debate or fighting, yet here we are.
As the Colorado River runs low, so too do rivers, lakes and tributaries around the world. It’s time for action, not debate or fighting, yet here we are.
The world is full of trash – and opportunity! Epic reuse of waste resources by turning them into useful products makes us part of the solution.
Companies that deal with oil and fuel especially have been known to cause waste to enter the ground or the local water.
Policymakers should look at environmental injustice in addressing climate change, a study suggests.
Like mice in a field, fighting over the last seeds, people will make a living even if doing so means continued pollution and failure to mitigate climate change.
Decades deep in megadrought and damaged by the climate crisis, seven states will soon be obligated to stop using an Arizona’s-worth of Colorado River water.
Tying it together: consumption, population, ecological decline, the fossil fuel problem, climate change, hard solutions, and why we’re not going to fix it.
Heat, hurricanes, rolling blackouts, food shortages, high fuel costs, more COVID, political violence. By the end of summer, will people will take our dire situation more seriously?
Shell Oil just recorded record profits with inflationary price increases.
Last week nearly 200 countries agreed in principle to an international plastic treaty that aims to tackle global plastic pollution, but the devil is in the details.