Public

"Fla. County Battered By 2024 Hurricanes Spends $125M On Beach Restoration"

"The white sandy beaches along a swath of Florida’s Gulf Coast were battered by three hurricanes last year, leading to a multimillion-dollar effort to repair a coastline that is the region’s economic engine."

Source: AP, 10/09/2025

"Progress on Africa’s ‘Great Green Wall’ Stalls as Seedlings Die Off"

"Countries in the Sahel region of Africa have made little progress on the “Great Green Wall,” a 5,000-mile-long band of trees planned for the southern edge of the Sahara Desert. Even where communities are planting new trees, few seedlings actually survive, new research shows."

Source: YaleE360, 10/09/2025

Growing ‘Continuous Corn’ Doesn't Have To Emit Powerful Greenhouse Gas

"Corn monocropping emits higher levels of nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas which traps heat in the atmosphere more than 300 times as effectively as carbon dioxide. Simple interventions could drastically reduce emissions, experts say."

Source: Inside Climate News, 10/09/2025

"UN Plastics Treaty Chair To Step Down With Process In Turmoil"

"The chair of stalled UN plastics treaty talks, Luis Vayas Valdivieso, is preparing to step down, after accounts of behind-the-scenes pressure from the United Nations Environment Programme (Unep)." "In August, global talks at the UN headquarters in Geneva to agree on a treaty to deal with accelerating plastic pollution collapsed after three years of negotiations. There is currently no deal and the future of the agreement is unclear."

Source: Guardian, 10/09/2025

"White House Offers ‘Concierge’ Service To Fossil Fuel Firms, Official Says"

"The White House is offering “concierge, white glove service” to oil, coal and other fossil fuel companies that are seeking to gain fast approval for their projects, according to an energy official, while simultaneously slowing down or blocking solar and wind projects."

Source: Washington Post, 10/09/2025

Company Bids Less Than A Penny Per Ton In Biggest US Coal Sale In Decade

"A Navajo tribe-owned company bid $186,000 to lease 167 million tons of coal on federal lands in southeastern Montana on Monday in the biggest U.S. coal sale in more than a decade. The offer from the Navajo Transitional Energy Co. (NTEC) equates to one-tenth of a penny per ton, underscoring coal’s diminished value even as President Donald Trump pushes to mine and burn more of the heavily polluting fuel."

Source: AP, 10/08/2025

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Public