Andrew Harnik/Getty Images June 18, 2025 What We’re Watching: Coming Historic Heat Plus Acute Risks Could Make Rest of June a Hot Mess Expected extreme heat in US was made more likely by climate change. Erika Spanger Director of Strategic Climate Analytics
Brandon Bell/Getty Images June 17, 2025 Worsening Wildfires Contribute to Increasingly Unaffordable Insurance and Housing Costs Rachel Cleetus Policy Director
Julien Goettelmann/Unsplash June 17, 2025 Railroads Are Running Dirty Diesel Trains Through Communities and No One Is Doing Anything About It Dave Cooke Senior Vehicles Analyst
Photo: Karen Long MacLeod/CPLC October 24, 2018 New Report Has Bad News for Illinois Coal Plants: It’s Time to Go Jessica Collingsworth Former Contributor
Puget Sound and Mt. Rainier Climate, Confronting Climate Change in Washington (2015) October 23, 2018 Voting on I-1631? Here’s How Much Healthier You Could Make Washington’s Climate Geeta Persad Former Contributor
Photo: Brenda Ekwurzel October 23, 2018 Yes, ExxonMobil and Chevron are Still Distorting Climate Science Brenda Ekwurzel Director of Scientific Excellence
Photo: John Saller October 23, 2018 Milwaukee Area Science Advocates Collaborate to End Lead Exposure UCS Science Network
Jason Leem/Unsplash October 23, 2018 Saturday Night Live and the Land Carbon Sink Carly Phillips Research Scientist
Photo: BlackRockSolar October 22, 2018 Why Nevadans Should Vote Yes on Question 6 Laura Wisland Former Contributor
Trish Sheehan/Moms Clean Air Force October 19, 2018 Fighting for Facts and Family: What Will We Tell Our Kids? Gretchen Goldman President of UCS
Allison Cain/UCS October 19, 2018 EPA’s Proposal to Restrict Science Will Be Delayed: Score One for Science. Andrew Rosenberg Former Contributor
JPL Women in STEM. JPL SFOF Darkroom. Requester: Kimberley Kline. Photographer: T. Wynne Date: 11-FEB-2016 Photolab order: 070915-146556 October 15, 2018 Fighting for a Diverse and Equitable STEM Workforce in Colorado UCS Science Network
Michael Latner/UCS October 15, 2018 November Elections and the Art of Voter Suppression Michael Latner Former UCS Fellow
Photo: Alex Edelman/AP Images October 12, 2018 Why Andrew Wheeler’s Social Media Actions Matter Andrew Rosenberg Former Contributor
Photo: Diliff/Wikimedia Commons October 11, 2018 Scientists Cut Out of EPA’s Particulate Pollution Standard Setting Gretchen Goldman President of UCS
Photo: CMRF Crumlin/Flickr October 11, 2018 Sidelining Science Hurts Children Jacob Carter Former Contributor
Photo: IIP Photo Archive/Flickr October 10, 2018 With The Farm Bill Expired, Will Science Stall? Marcia DeLonge Former Contributor
Photo: Ryan McKnight October 10, 2018 Three Reasons Bernard McNamee is a Horrible Choice for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Sam Gomberg Senior Analyst
Public Domain October 10, 2018 Clean Transportation Technologies Can Cut Emissions and Save Northeast Over $1 Trillion in Reduced Spending on Oil. Daniel Gatti Former contributor
Credit: USFWS October 9, 2018 Half a Degree of Warming Could be the Difference Between Survival and Extinction for Many Species Adam Markham Former Staff
NASA October 9, 2018 Hurricane Michael Threatens Gulf Coast Homes and Military Bases Kristy Dahl Former Staff
October 8, 2018 The IPCC Gets Real about the 1.5°C Target Peter Frumhoff Former Director of Science and Policy and Chief Climate Scientist
Photo: Dolores González Elementary School October 8, 2018 On Indigenous People’s Day, a Look at the Movement to Revive Native Foodways and How Western Science Might Support—For a Change Ricardo Salvador Former Contributor
October 5, 2018 Pathways to 1.5C: Carbon Budget in the IPCC Special Report Brenda Ekwurzel Director of Scientific Excellence
As the IPCC report will make clear, when it comes to climate change, we are all in the same boat. Photo taken by the author at COP23 in Bonn, Germany last November October 5, 2018 Will the IPCC 1.5 Degrees Special Report Help Drive Greater Climate Ambition? Alden Meyer Former Contributor