18hon MSN
Millions rely on dwindling Colorado River — but are kept ‘in the dark’ about fixes, critics say
Negotiations aimed at solving the Colorado River's water shortage are at an impasse. Environmentalists are criticizing a lack of public information about the closed-door talks.
Water levels have dropped dramatically in a large lake in the Texas Hill Country, even after devastating floods ravaged the region earlier this summer. An expanding drought in the Lone Star State is ...
The Walrus on MSN
Big Tech Is Hiding the Environmental Cost of Chatbots
In addition to Microsoft’s ambitions, companies like Meta, Amazon, and Google have joined a pledge to triple the world’s nuclear capacity by 2050. But new nuclear capacity will take years to come ...
California's new water year began on October 1, bringing a new weather cycle with it as well. However, state officials are warning residents that this new water year is set to get a series of extreme ...
From bone-chilling blizzards and hurricane-force winds to devastating droughts and biblical-style floods, these are the worst weather events the world has experienced in the last century.
Our hope is that the future of the river will not depend on finger-pointing, but on practical, measurable solutions that protect both farmers and families.
Time is running out for the seven states in the Colorado River Basin, as well as 30 tribes and Mexico, to reach a long-term deal for managing the overtapped river. The current guidelines and drought ...
The guidelines that manage the Colorado River expire at the end of 2026, and stakeholders must decide how to share the resource moving forward. That's easier said than done.
Opinion
15hon MSNOpinion
California’s dying salmon test our environmental values. We’re flunking | Opinion
The Golden State was once heralded for a leader in global environmentalism. What would it say about us if we let salmon go extinct?
It's been a doozy of a year for marine mammals, who have been dying in record numbers along the California coast. Volunteer rescue crews are traumatized and fatigued, but refuse to give up.
Alan Taylor is a senior editor at The Atlantic.
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