Seattle advocacy groups are promoting social housing as both an affordable housing solution and a climate strategy.
How New York's Rich History of Urban Gardening Connects Food Justice and Climate Mitigation

The article explores the intertwining narratives of food justice, urban gardening, and climate mitigation in New York. It highlights the historical roots of community gardens and urban farming as forms of resistance, emphasizing their role in providing fresh produce in underserved, historically disinvested neighborhoods. Many Black land stewards continue this legacy, viewing their work as a source of community care and local food production. While not explicitly climate activists, these individuals inadvertently contribute to climate mitigation through practices that combat food apartheid and promote environmental resilience. Urban gardens are recognized for benefits such as stormwater runoff mitigation, heat reduction, air filtration, and carbon sequestration, presenting small-scale solutions for communities affected by climate change. The article also mentions organizations and initiatives fostering education and empowerment in sustainable agriculture within Black communities, ultimately creating spaces that reduce climate impacts in frontline regions.
Texas oil and gas companies are pushing for the state to gain regulatory authority—known as primacy—over carbon capture projects, which involve injecting carbon dioxide...
A Trump administration executive order freezing all foreign aid has led to the abrupt shutdown of U.S.A.I.D.-funded clinical trials worldwide, leaving thousands of participants...
The Trump administration has placed 168 Environmental Protection Agency employees on administrative leave, a move widely seen as the first step in shutting down the agency’s...
Community leaders in historically Black and brown neighborhoods of Houston are calling for greater government attention to long-standing issues such as infrastructure neglect...
The Trump administration has swiftly removed key environmental justice and climate data from government websites, including the Climate & Economic Justice Screening Tool...
Exxon has applied for tax subsidies to build an $8.6 billion plastics plant in Point Comfort, Texas, raising concerns among environmentalists and local residents.
The Environmental Protection Agency has partially lifted a spending freeze that had halted funding for environmental programs under the bipartisan infrastructure law...
Experts from government, academia, and activism gathered in Philadelphia to discuss climate disaster preparedness as the Trump administration considers cutting FEMA funding.
The Trump administration has removed the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool (CEJST), a key resource used to identify disadvantaged communities for environmental justice..
Despite Donald Trump’s push to expand offshore drilling, oil companies are unlikely to act on new leases in the Gulf of Mexico due to an already over saturated market.
The EPA is reassessing the health risks of nitrates in drinking water, with growing concerns that exposure could increase cancer risk.
President Trump’s temporary freeze on federal grants and loans created widespread uncertainty for environmental and climate programs before being rescinded.
A coalition of U.S. power companies is urging the Trump administration to weaken coal ash regulations, arguing that cleanup requirements are overly burdensome.
Black farmers in Nicodemus, Kansas, have practiced sustainable agriculture for generations, using climate-smart methods long before they became widely recognized.