Don't believe the cynics -- we'll get climate change targets after U.S. tosses Bush.
Pasadena is reaching to achieve Kyoto environmental protections and beyond, but there's much work left to be done.
Ross Clark is the man whose job it is to reduce Santa Cruz's carbon footprint.
Ten years after Kyoto, the biggest changes are happening on a small scale -- here are several Northeast Florida residents who've made the important, meaningful and often surprisingly easy decision to go green.
NASA scientist calls for 10-year moratorium on coal-fired power plants.
State senator parades dubious "global warming experts" before commission.
Duke Energy and ConocoPhillips have donated $3.5 million to Duke University's Climate Change Policy Partnership, and that financial support may have influenced academic research.
A decade after the international community agreed to the Kyoto Protocol, and five years since Parliament ratified the agreement, there isn't a lot of good news about how Canada has done in living up to its international obligations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
The members of Mr. Free and the Satellite Freakout have learned that getting a tour bus to run on vegetable oil is no easy task.
Climate change and urban development are two major causes of habitat loss, according to Tucson Audubon Society executive director Paul Green.
Oregon's local response to climate change.
Louisville, Ky., inches along on climate protection.
Tom Fitzgerald, director of the Kentucky Resources Council, talks about Kyoto, Kentucky, carbon, optimism in a time of crisis, and how we might extract ourselves from the mess we’ve made of our ecosystem.
The city of Columbia, S.C., is not waiting for a federal mandate to go green.
Local governments in California are taking the global warming fight in their own hands.
California State University-Monterey Bay and Monterey Institute of International Studies pledge to teach sustainability.
Anniversaries offer us the opportunity for reflection on the past and a re-commitment to the future. Let's hope that this Dec 11, the 10th anniversary of the day the international community reached agreement on the Kyoto Protocol, does the same for the nations of the world as they meet in Bali to create the framework for the next phase of global action on climate change.
The push to do something about global warming starts at the bottom.
A faith-based call for environmental stewardship.
If we did our part to slow climate change, maybe Georgia would become a nicer place to live.
Sterling College's Center for Northern Studies talks tundra in a warming world.
No one except the radical ear-plugging lunatic fringe denies that we're messing up the world in a potentially cataclysmic fashion. The question is whether we'll have the intelligence and fortitude to do anything about it. And though we're just a tiny little county situated on the unimportant end of California, with not much influence anywhere to speak of, we have reason to be proud.