News

Scientists blame unusually warm oceans, not cloud seeding, for Texas and North Carolina floods. Yet state lawmakers seek to ban geoengineering, though no such projects exist in North Carolina.
The exhaust from airplanes contains small particles called aerosols. These particles act as a “landing zone” for the molecules in water vapor. Under the right conditions, the water molecules come ...
Several New England EPA employees were suspended after signing a letter critical of the Trump administration's environmental ...
The West’s most important river has shriveled over the past quarter century — and its leading climate scientist says things ...
Local governments say the EPA’s blanket cancellation of equity-related funding jeopardizes climate resilience efforts, air ...
After signing a critical letter to their boss, 139 EPA workers were put under investigation and on a 2-week paid ...
Under Zeldin, the Environmental Protection Agency is ​t​orching regulations that protect us from ​a terrifying range of toxic ...
The EPA is trying to fight cloud seeding conspiracy theories. It chose the worst way to do it. Let's start with the facts.
The Trump administration is working carefully to stamp out conspiracy theories about "weather modification," wading into a viral, recurring debate that reignited in the wake of Texas' deadly flooding.
Americans are equally reluctant to embrace the climate crisis narrative because it inevitably leads to expensive energy costs ...
Republicans took a conflicted stance in their megabill: They will help factories that make electric vehicle batteries, but ...