T/environment

  1. Who Is Not Funding This Antarctic Expedition? Video, Yesterday

    Our climate reporter Raymond Zhong describes America’s shifting relationship with polar research amid the threat of rising sea levels.

  2. E.P.A. Weakens Limits on Mercury From Coal Plants Climate, February 20

    The move appeared to undercut the Make America Healthy Again movement led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a onetime campaigner against mercury pollution.

  3. La Antártida pone tu mundo de cabeza En español, February 20

    Mi colega acaba de pasar dos meses en un buque rompehielos de investigación. Cambió su perspectiva de nuestro planeta de un modo que no esperaba.

  4. He Was a Climate Activist. One Day, the F.B.I. Came Knocking. New York, February 20

    As the Trump administration cracks down on climate change activism, members of environmental groups like Extinction Rebellion fear they are being targeted.

  5. Warming Climate Can Increase Avalanche Risk, Studies Show Climate, February 19

    Research has pointed to the dangers of heavier and wetter snowfall, even as the number of snowy days decreases overall in California’s Sierra Nevada.

  6. An Antarctic Voyage World, February 19

    My colleague just spent two months on a research icebreaker. It changed his perspective on the world in ways he didn’t expect.

  7. Data Centers and Your Power Bill Climate, February 19

    New A.I. sites could drive up your power bill. We look at possible solutions.

  8. U.S. Tells International Energy Agency to Drop Its Focus on Climate Change Climate, February 19

    The Trump administration is threatening to leave the influential agency unless it stops publishing its annual road map for cutting planet-warming emissions.

  9. On an Ambitious Antarctic Quest, One Nation Is on the Sidelines Climate, February 19

    None of the main research on the voyage of the Araon was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation, a sign of the difficult times for American science.

  10. We’re Back on Land in New Zealand Climate, February 18

    But stay tuned: We’ve still got more to share about this Antarctic expedition, and the next ones scientists are already planning.

  11. E.P.A. Plans to Loosen Mercury Rules for Coal Plants, Documents Show Climate, February 18

    Senior officials at the Environmental Protection Agency are expected to announce the move on Friday, according to people briefed on the matter.

  12. As Trump Obliterates Climate Efforts, States Try to Fill the Gap Climate, February 18

    Across the country, Democratic-led states are accelerating their initiatives to cut greenhouse gas emissions. Their role just became much more important.

  13. E.P.A. Faces First Lawsuit Over Its Killing of Major Climate Rule Climate, February 18

    Environmental and health groups sued the E.P.A. over its elimination of the endangerment finding. The matter is likely to end up before the Supreme Court.

  14. Uber Will Offer Incentives for E.V. Charger Construction Business, February 18

    The company said it would encourage companies that operated chargers to install them in neighborhoods where its drivers lived and work.

  15. Methane Hunters Track Swamp Gas That Is Driving Climate Warming Climate, February 18

    Methane emissions from wetlands are rising faster than those from industrial sources, prompting concerns about a climate feedback loop.

  16. Documenting a ‘Drastically Changing’ Scientific Landscape Times Insider, February 17

    In the Lost Science series, scientists whose jobs or funding have been cut by the Trump administration tell their stories.

  17. Potomac Sewage Spill Becomes Ecological Disaster and Political Fight Climate, February 17

    A D.C. utility had been working for weeks to repair a collapsed sewer line when the president blamed Maryland’s governor for the contamination on Monday.

  18. Jesse Jackson’s Life and Legacy Opinion, February 17

    Readers reflect on the passing of the civil rights leader. Also: Power serving the public; climate change and gravity.

  19. It’s Mardi Gras in New Orleans. This Year, the Party Might Be a Bit Greener. Climate, February 17

    Carnival can generate more than 1,000 tons of trash every year. A coalition of nonprofit groups, city officials and scientists has a plan to clean it up.

  20. With Latest Rollback, the U.S. Essentially Has No Clean-Car Rules Climate, February 16

    The E.P.A.’s killing of the “endangerment finding” caps a year of deregulation that is likely to make cars thirstier for gas and less competitive globally, experts say.

  21. Trump Administration Ends Credit for Start-Stop Feature in Vehicles Business, February 15

    Manufacturers will no longer get a credit toward vehicle emissions standards by installing engines that automatically stop at red lights.

  22. New Research Absolves the Woman Blamed for a Dynasty’s Ruin World, February 14

    A Chinese king’s infatuation with a woman was seen as the reason that a golden age collapsed. Evidence suggests climate change and internal strife played bigger roles.

  23. Trump Erased a Bedrock Climate Rule. Here Come the Lawsuits. Climate, February 13

    The battle is expected to reach the Supreme Court, which is far more conservative today than it was when the measure was established.

  24. What a Times Reporter on an Antarctica Expedition Eats in a Day Video, February 13

    Our climate reporter Raymond Zhong has spent more than a month on a South Korean ship in Antarctica with nearly 40 scientists from around the world. Here’s everything he eats in a day.

  25. A Climate Supercomputer Is Getting New Bosses. It’s Not Clear Who. Climate, February 13

    The National Science Foundation said management of the machine, used by researchers for forecasts, disaster warnings and pure science, would be transferred to a “third-party operator.”

  26. The Best Ways to Regulate Marijuana Opinion, February 13

    Readers respond to an editorial about the legalization and regulation of marijuana. Also: The Trump administration’s attack on climate science.

  27. El Niño podría volver este verano y traería sequías e inundaciones En español, February 13

    El último fenómeno de El Niño, en 2022 y 2023, fue uno de los principales impulsores de temperaturas mundiales récord, ya que la atmósfera absorbió calor del océano.

  28. Floods. Smoke. Soaring Bills. Mamdani’s Climate Czar Has a Full Agenda. New York, February 13

    Louise Yeung relishes the intricacies of policy debates and the magic of rom-coms. She lives in Brooklyn with her cat and two snails.

  29. Trump Rejects E.P.A.’s Ability to Regulate Greenhouse Gases Video, February 12

    The Environmental Protection Agency repealed the bedrock scientific finding that greenhouse gases threaten human life and well being. This ends the federal government’s legal authority to control the pollution that is dangerously heating the planet.

  30. El Niño May Be Back This Summer, Bringing Drought and Floods Climate, February 12

    The powerful weather pattern is expected to shift into gear again around June, NOAA said, though its strength this time remains a question.

  31. What to Know About the E.P.A.’s Big Attack on Climate Regulation Climate, February 12

    The Trump administration has repealed the scientific determination that underpins the government’s legal authority to combat climate change.

  32. Trump Administration Erases the Government’s Power to Fight Climate Change Climate, February 12

    The Environmental Protection Agency repealed the bedrock scientific finding that greenhouse gases threaten human life and well being. It means the agency can no longer regulate them.

  33. The Secret Plan to End U.S. Climate Regulations The Daily, February 12

    A small group of conservative activists has worked for 16 years to stop all government efforts to fight climate change. Their efforts seem poised to pay off.

  34. Se buscan focas para hacer ciencia en la Antártida En español, February 12

    Las focas de la Antártida pueden sumergirse hasta unos mil metros, lo que ha hecho que los científicos las recluten para recolectar mediciones a profundidades que serían difíciles de acceder en barco.

  35. Trump Orders the Pentagon to Buy More Coal-Fired Electricity Climate, February 11

    Mr. Trump is trying to revive coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel. At the White House, coal executives awarded him a trophy as the “Undisputed Champion of Beautiful Clean Coal.”

  36. ‘An Uphill Struggle’: King Charles Is Not Giving Up on the Planet Yet World, February 11

    Environmentalism may have gone out of fashion on Wall Street and in the White House, but the British monarch says he remains deeply committed to the cause in a new documentary, ‘Finding Harmony’.

  37. The Conservative Activists Behind One of Trump’s Biggest Climate Moves Climate, February 10

    Four Trump allies have been a driving force behind the administration’s efforts to rollback a key climate regulation.

  38. Climate Change Is Erased From a Manual for Federal Judges Climate, February 10

    After Republican criticism, a group that offers professional resources to judges withdrew a climate science chapter from its Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence.

  39. The E.P.A. Is Barreling Toward a Supreme Court Climate Showdown Climate, February 10

    The agency is racing to repeal a scientific finding that requires it to fight global warming. Experts say the goal is to get the matter before the justices while President Trump is still in office.

  40. Antarctica’s Best Ocean Explorers Have Whiskers and Love to Lounge Climate, February 10

    The environment is changing rapidly around the melting Thwaites Glacier. Seals can collect data in waters that ships could never reach.

  41. What Should Democrats Do to Create a Durable Majority? Our Readers Have Thoughts. Opinion, February 10

    We got hundreds of suggestions.

  42. The Artist Nick Cave Couches His Critique in Dazzle Arts, February 10

    For “Mammoth,” a new show at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, he takes up contentious issues of race and climate change in beads, sequins and Lite-Brite colors.

  43. Trump Allies Near ‘Total Victory’ in Wiping Out U.S. Climate Regulation Climate, February 10

    A small group of conservative activists has worked for 16 years to stop all government efforts to fight climate change. Their efforts seem poised to pay off.

  44. The Latest Victim of a Snowless West: Dog Sledding Travel, February 9

    Organizers of the Idaho Sled Dog Challenge said they would no longer hold a major competition after snow conditions forced its cancellation for a third straight year.

  45. The February 9 Antarctica Thwaites Glacier live blog included one standalone post:
  46. MAGA Elites Are Indoor Cats Opinion, February 8

    Before MAGA, conservatives’ affinity for wilderness was a powerful force in American politics.

  47. What’s Up With This Big Freeze? Some Scientists See Climate Change Link Climate, February 7

    A warming Arctic can stretch the polar vortex, a high-altitude air ribbon, one says. The “wobble” can disrupt the jet stream, causing extreme cold in the East.

  48. A First Look Below Antarctica’s Most Menacing Glacier Video, February 6

    Scientists on the Thwaites Glacier attempted to install equipment beneath the ice to better understand how it is melting. Our climate reporter Raymond Zhong walks us through their landmark experiment and the bittersweet outcome.

  49. To Study Antarctic Ice Rifts, You Have to Throw a Few ‘Bombs’ Climate, February 6

    The fastest way into the gaps between gigantic blocks of a broken-up glacier is by lowering instruments from above, through the door of a helicopter.

  50. Climate ‘Superfund’ Bills Spread Nationwide, Despite Legal Battles Climate, February 6

    The laws aim to force oil companies to help pay for damage from global warming. Industry is gearing up for state-by-state battles.

  51. When Venezuelan Oil Comes to the U.S. Climate, February 5

    In Mississippi, neighbors of a Chevron plant worry that an influx of Venezuelan oil could increase pollution. They want the company to pay to move them out.

  52. Bebés, robots y el cambio climático En español, February 5

    ¿Qué significa para la humanidad estar disminuyendo? ¿Podrá eso resolver el cambio climático o las alteraciones que trajo consigo la IA?

  53. Babies, Robots and Climate Change World, February 4

    It’s often assumed that lower birthrates could help slow climate change and A.I. disruption. The reality is more complex.

  54. In a Mississippi Bayou, Venezuelan Oil Is Already Big. And Could Get Bigger. Climate, February 4

    The U.S. claim on Venezuela’s oil means even more of it could come to a huge Chevron refinery. Neighbors worried about pollution want the company to buy their homes.

  55. Why U.S. Car Companies Want to Make Giant Batteries Climate, February 3

    Even as American automakers have scaled back their ambitions for electric vehicles, some are pivoting to a technology that could help boost renewable energy.

  56. Deep Inside an Antarctic Glacier, a Mission Collapses at Its Final Step Climate, February 2

    Scientists lost their instruments within Antarctica’s most dangerously unstable glacier, though not before getting a glimpse at the warming waters underneath.

  57. Icemageddon, Southern Style Opinion, February 2

    An ice storm will bring a city like Nashville to its knees.

  58. Western Ski Resorts and Their Terrible, Horrible, No Snow, Very Bad Year Travel, February 2

    Little snowpack, strikes by mountain staff and Trump administration policies that are keeping international visitors away have made this a difficult season in the Rockies and beyond.

  59. Who Loves Turbulence, Airplane Food and the Middle Seat? They Do. Travel, February 2

    What the travelers who adore some common annoyances of flying can teach everyone else about the power of changing one’s perspective.

  60. Snow Drought in the West Reaches Record Levels Science, February 1

    Warm temperatures and extremely low snowfall threaten water resources for the year.

  61. What Would It Take to Actually Freeze the Hudson River? Weather, January 31

    New York City is icy and cold right now, but you’re probably not going to be able to walk to New Jersey any time soon.

  62. Kids Sent Us Antarctica Questions. Here Are the Answers. Video, January 30

    Do snowy owls live in Antarctica? What’s the most alarming measurement scientists are watching for? What do you eat and drink? Our climate reporter Raymond Zhong answers some questions from students around the world.

  63. A Secret Panel to Question Climate Science Was Unlawful, Judge Rules Climate, January 30

    The researchers produced a report that was central in a Trump administration effort to stop regulating climate pollution.

  64. Drilling Is Underway to Examine Antarctica’s Melting Ice From Below Climate, January 30

    A team hopes to place instruments in the waters beneath the colossal Thwaites Glacier, with the help of a drill that uses hot water to punch through ice.

  65. Something Dark Is Growing on Greenland’s Ice. And Melting It Faster. Climate, January 30

    New studies show how algae grows on ice and snow, creating “dark zones” that exacerbate melting in the consequential region.

  66. Climate Change Is Fueling Extremes, Both Hot and Cold Climate, January 29

    The possibility of snow in Tampa, Fla. Record heat and fires in Australia. Scientists say climate change is exacerbating weather extremes.

  67. Some Polar Bears Are Getting Fatter Even as Sea Ice Shrinks (for Now) Climate, January 29

    Seals favored by Svalbard bears are becoming easier to hunt as ice declines, a study found. But researchers say the situation may be temporary.

  68. Court Orders the Netherlands to Protect a Caribbean Island From Climate Change Climate, January 28

    Bonaire, a Dutch overseas territory, deserves the same protections as Europe, the ruling said. The decision adds to a growing body of precedent worldwide.

  69. Se acaban los segundos del reloj del apocalipsis En español, January 28

    Las guerras, el cambio climático, las tecnologías disruptivas y el ascenso de la autocracia durante el año pasado llevaron a los científicos a poner el reloj a 85 segundos de la medianoche.

  70. Life on an Antarctic Glacier: Tea, Cheese and Lots of Shoveling Climate, January 28

    After working and camping for a week on Thwaites Glacier, scientists were ready to start drilling into the ice, if only the weather would let them.

  71. Doomsday Clock Ticks Closer Than Ever to Apocalypse U.S., January 28

    Wars, climate change, disruptive technologies and the rise of autocracy over the past year prompted scientists to set the clock at 85 seconds to midnight.

  72. Judge Revives Wind Farm That Trump Halted Off Martha’s Vineyard Climate, January 27

    The project, known as Vineyard Wind, was already 95 percent complete when the Trump administration ordered construction to stop.

  73. Michigan Sues Oil Giants, Saying They Collude to Make Energy Costlier Climate, January 27

    The lawsuit accuses the companies of raising prices by working against solar and wind power and by downplaying the risks of climate change.

  74. America Officially Leaves the Paris Climate Agreement. For the Second Time. Climate, January 27

    The United States is the only country to pull out of the global agreement among nations to fight climate change. European diplomats say the U.S. reputation is suffering.

  75. How Does Climate Change Affect Winter Storms? Weather, January 26

    A warmer atmosphere has the potential to hold more moisture, which can contribute to heavier precipitation in any season, scientists say.

  76. The Trump Administration Now Thinks Clean Air Is Worthless Opinion, January 26

    Average Americans could experience significant hits to their health and their pocketbooks.

  77. Is climate change weakening the polar vortex? Climate, January 24

    Rising Arctic temperatures and melting sea ice could be causing cold air to flow into the Northern Hemisphere. But not all scientists agree.

  78. How a Year of Trump Changed Britain World, January 24

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer stood firm over Greenland. But his center-left government and the country as a whole have been buffeted by President Trump.

  79. Setting Foot on the Melting Thwaites Glacier Video, January 24

    Bad weather ​delayed expedition scientists’​ ​efforts to set up camp on Thwaites Glacier ​in Antarctica ​and take measurements ​to determine how quickly it is melting. After the skies cleared, our journalists​, Raymond Zhong and Chang W. Lee​, took us along for their first steps on Thwaites.

  80. How the National Park Service Is Deleting American History Climate, January 23

    Philadelphia sued the Trump administration after it directed the Park Service to rip out a memorial to slavery. Elsewhere, materials about climate change and labor history were being removed.

  81. Why Is New York’s Fictional Future So Often Dystopian? Arts, October 20

    If you’re a writer or filmmaker hoping to create a hell on earth, might as well start with the most famous city in the world.

  82. Gabbard Ends Intelligence Report on Future Threats to U.S. U.S., September 26

    Some issues in the document, which is issued every four years, had become politically inconvenient, former officials said.

  83. California’s High Gas Prices Could Climb Further as Refineries Close Business, September 16

    The state has led the country in adopting electric cars and reducing gas use, but it now faces much higher gas prices as oil companies plan to shut down refineries.

  84. It’s the End of ‘Big City.’ New York Will Be Fine. New York, August 29

    The weekly column that focused on inequality in the city ran for 14 years, from Occupy Wall Street to Zohran Mamdani. Now it comes to a close.

  85. Censored Science Can’t Save Lives Op Ed, February 18

    Progress cannot occur if scientists are barred from asking certain questions.

  86. El legado presidencial de Biden: una era de cambio, marcada para siempre por Trump En español, January 16

    La gestión de Biden estará en los libros de historia como un interregno entre dos mandatos de Donald Trump, una pausa en medio de un periodo caótico de cambio, para bien o para mal.

  87. Biden’s Presidential Legacy: An Era of Change, Forever Marked by Trump Washington, January 15

    Biden’s disastrous debate performance highlighted age concerns.

  88. Why Oil Companies Are Walking Back From Green Energy Business, November 18

    As leaders gather for a global climate summit, investors are rewarding oil giants like Exxon Mobil that did not embrace wind and solar.

  89. The Lesson of This Election: We Must Stop Inflation Before It Starts Op Ed, November 12

    Our nation needs an economic disaster preparedness tool kit to avoid the scourge of inflation.

  90. MAGA vs. Science Is No Contest Op Ed, September 11

    A substantial number of Republican voters are losing faith in science.

  91. Registering Voters and Certifying the Votes Letters, August 12

    Readers discuss election obstacles. Also: Donald Trump’s claim about Kamala Harris’s crowds; the Olympics; Covid vaccines; food and the climate.

  92. Where the Wild Things Went During the Pandemic Science, March 18

    A new study of camera-trap images complicates the idea that all wildlife thrived during the Covid lockdowns.

  93. How to Parent in a World Under Siege? Book Review, March 12

    In her elegant essay collection, “Lessons for Survival,” Emily Raboteau confronts climate collapse, societal breakdown and the Covid pandemic while trying to raise children in a responsible way.

  94. A Mother, a Daughter, a Deadly Journey: An Update The Daily, December 28

    An increasing number of migrants are trying to pass through the dangerous terrain connecting South and Central America. What forces them to take that route?

  95. Germany Cannot Shift Covid Funds to Climate Projects, Court Rules Business, November 15

    The decision could rip a hole in Berlin’s budget and complicate the transition to a greener economy.

  96. The Upside of a Population Decline Letters, October 5

    Readers disagree with an essay expressing concern about a decline after a peak. Also: Rudy Giuliani’s drinking; book bans; masks in hospitals; wedding magic.

  97. A Mayor Goes AWOL in the Storm Editorial, October 3

    With residents unprepared for New York City’s recent flooding, it was a day of unnecessary chaos and frustration.

  98. The Paranoid Style in American Plutocrats Op Ed, August 28

    Of climate denial, Covid denial and cryptocurrency.

  99. Por qué parece que ya no sabemos nada de la economía global En español, June 20

    Mientras prestábamos atención a la pandemia, China y Ucrania, los caminos hacia la prosperidad y los intereses comunes se han oscurecido.

  100. Why It Seems Everything We Knew About the Global Economy Is No Longer True Business, June 18

    While the world’s eyes were on the pandemic, China and the war in Ukraine, the paths to prosperity and shared interests have grown murkier.

  101. Radical Rethinking at Biennale: Africa and the Future Share Pride of Place Culture, May 22

    Don’t be fooled by its generic title. Lesley Lokko’s “Laboratory of the Future” is the most ambitious and pointedly political Venice Architecture Biennale in years.

  102. ‘The Last of Us’ Is Right. Our Warming Planet Is a Petri Dish. Op Ed, April 2

    Fungi are a public health blind spot.

  103. As Oil Companies Stay Lean, Workers Move to Renewable Energy Business, February 27

    Solar, wind, geothermal, battery and other alternative-energy businesses are adding workers from fossil fuel companies, where employment has fallen.

  104. Your Wednesday Briefing: Shanghai’s Devastating Outbreak N Y T Now, January 10

    Also, the eight warmest years on record and a fragile political alliance in the Philippines.

  105. Cheer Up! The World Is Better Off Than You Think. Op Ed, December 31

    The year 2022 was not great. But even in the midst of overlapping calamities, progress is being made.

  106. Balancing Hope and Despair in Turbulent Times Special Sections, December 1

    As long as we do the best we can, and appreciate life’s fullness, we will leave the world a better place for our children.

  107. John Kerry Tests Positive for Covid at U.N. Climate Talks, Complicating Final Hours Climate, November 18

    Debate intensified over a contentious issue: the creation of a fund to help poor and vulnerable countries pay for loss and damage caused by climate change.

  108. What Happens When a Cascade of Crises Collide? Op Ed, November 13

    Humanity faces a complex knot of seemingly distinct but entangled crises that are causing damage greater than the sum of their individual harms.

  109. Belice recurre a su arrecife de coral para escapar de la trampa de la deuda en Español, November 8

    Algunos países en desarrollo están haciendo acuerdos financieros que podrían darles un mayor papel en la lucha contra el cambio climático.

  110. How Belize Cut Its Debt by Fighting Global Warming Foreign, November 7

    Developing nations are reducing their debt by pledging to protect their resources in financial deals that could give them a bigger role in the fight against climate change.

  111. Your Thursday Briefing: Iran’s Protests Intensify N Y T Now, October 26

    Plus Myanmar gets closer to Russia and a dire climate report.

  112. Should Candidates Be Transparent About Their Health? Letters, October 16

    How much should candidates disclose about their health? Also: Drone rules; political fears; future pandemics; donations and climate policy.

  113. Bill Gates: ‘Estamos en una peor situación de lo que esperaba’ en Español, September 18

    El filántropo habló sobre cómo la pandemia y los efectos de la guerra en Ucrania están retrasando el progreso.

  114. Bill Gates: ‘We’re in a Worse Place Than I Expected’ Op Ed, September 13

    The philanthropist on how the pandemic and the effects of the war in Ukraine are setting back progress.

  115. When Schools Don’t Educate Their Students Letters, September 13

    Readers discuss an investigation into the lack of secular education at New York’s yeshivas. Also: Outdoor dining; climate-crisis deniers.

  116. U.N. Faces Record Humanitarian Aid Shortfall — but Not for Ukrainians Foreign, August 22

    Soaring needs and wealthy countries’ focus on Ukraine have left aid agencies with too little money to address the world’s other crises, forcing them to cut programs.

  117. Ukraine Ships Grain at Last. It Will Take Far More to Slow Global Hunger. Foreign, August 1

    The departure of a grain-filled vessel from Odesa was hailed as a victory against global hunger. But experts say the crisis is so big that no single advance can reverse it.

  118. Biden Is Facing Crisis After Crisis. But Are They Emergencies? Washington, July 27

    President Biden is under pressure — often from his own allies — to declare national emergencies on issues like climate and abortion that are roiling American culture.

  119. Pakistan’s Deadly Flood Season Worsened by Climate Change and Bad Infrastructure Foreign, July 24

    Monsoon rains have devastated Pakistan’s economic hub, Karachi, adding urgency to pleas to better equip cities to handle more frequent extreme weather.

  120. ¿La naturaleza sanó durante la ‘antropausa’ pandémica? en Español, July 19

    La suspensión de actividades humanas por la covid ha sido una oportunidad para entender mejor cómo afectamos a otras especies del planeta.

  121. Climate Politics Are Worse Than You Think Op Ed, July 18

    If only it were just about money.

  122. Did Nature Heal During the Pandemic ‘Anthropause’? Science, July 16

    Covid precautions created a global slowdown in human activity — and an opportunity to learn more about the complex ways we affect other species.

  123. France Faces a Shortage of Mustard, Its Uniquely Beloved Condiment Foreign, July 14

    A perfect storm of climate change, a European war and Covid have left the French scrambling for alternatives.

  124. Your Wednesday Briefing: Extreme Heat Grips China N Y T Now, July 12

    Plus the conviction of an ailing Hong Kong activist and President Vladimir Putin’s upcoming trip to Iran.

  125. Dangerous Heat Wave Strikes China Foreign, July 12

    Parts of the east and south withered under extreme temperatures, even as health workers in hazmat suits persisted in a round of mandatory coronavirus tests.

  126. The 3 Most Important Climate Laws You’ve Never Heard Of Metro, July 8

    The Legislature passed some bills that are obscure but significant, in the view of climate activists.

  127. Your Friday Briefing: A Major U.S. Climate Ruling Dining, June 30

    Plus Xi Jinping visits Hong Kong and Ukraine takes back Snake Island.

  128. El mundo tiene que elegir: cooperar o colapsar en Español, June 20

    La COVID-19, el cambio climático y la posibilidad de una crisis alimentaria global demuestran que los problemas del mundo están muy ligados entre sí. Y también las soluciones.

  129. The World Has a Choice: Work Together or Fall Apart Op Ed, June 18

    No single country can solve the problem of rising food and fuel costs.

  130. What if We Had Spent the Money on Climate? Op Ed, June 15

    Along with everything else, the pandemic was a huge missed opportunity.

  131. Your Wednesday Briefing: Sievierodonetsk, Isolated N Y T Now, June 14

    The key Ukrainian city lost its last bridge as fighting intensifies.

  132. What Vaccine Apartheid Portends for the Climate Future Op Ed, May 24

    Gestures of good will and concern from developed countries can hide nationalism so pointed that it amounts to something like sadism.

  133. Your Friday Briefing: Russia Doubles Down N Y T Now, May 5

    Moscow wants victories before its Monday holiday.