More than half a million people were killed in 10 disasters that climate change worsened, according to a new report.
The consequences of a warming planet have been everywhere — except on the campaign trail. As the presidential candidates crisscross the United States, repeatedly addressing everything from a crisis at the border to a crisis in democracy, climate change rarely takes the stage.
The contest between Democrat Curtis Hertel and Republican Tom Barrett is ensnared in the debate around the Biden administration's effort to push the adoption of electric vehicles.
This November, climate protections are taking center stage across the United States as voters head to the polls.
A long-held ambition of the Biden administration, the Climate Corps launched earlier this year and now boasts some 15,000 members. They’ve been deployed doing everything from cl
Welcome to The Hill’s Sustainability newsletter{beacon} Sustainability Sustainability   The Big Story Where Trump and Harris stand on climate Americans are streaming to the polls
Advocates from multiple climate and environmental advocacy groups will make calls, unleash advertisements, knock on doors and utilize star power in support of Vice President Harris in the final stretch of the 2024 campaign,
Policies that are popular with voters across the country, like solar and wind development and other renewables, are also popular with Roaring Fork and Colorado River valley locals.
The future of that initiative — a climate-smart incentive that’s now part of the Conservation Reserve Program — is one of many climate-focused programs around agriculture that face an uncertain future if Donald Trump wins a second term as president Tuesday.
Lead Locally is another organization working to rally the environmental vote, by focusing on building support for down-ballot candidates with strong climate platforms. It has two more “Calls for Climate” events before election day — one is today, October 30, and another is Monday, election eve. You can learn more and sign up here.
They are hoping to harness the political power of millions of eligible Latino voters to protect children from climate change.
Down-ballot races across the U.S. are quietly shaping the nation’s climate agenda, from utility commissions to state legislatures, as local leaders vie to influence energy policy.Marcus Baram reports for Capital & Main.