Nature Lovers
- David Attenborough reveals his choice of successor: Professor Brian Cox
- The Kraken Wakes: What Architeuthis is Trying to Tell Us—Giant squids.
- Blast from the Past: Bear wins 2nd place in art contest
- Zambia bans hunting of lions and leopards
- Suspected poacher killed by Kenya Wildlife Service rangers
- Japanese whalers ordered out of Australian waters
- Insecticide 'unacceptable' danger to bees, report finds
- Brazilian Bikini Waxes Make Crab Lice Endangered Species
- Rhino poaching in South Africa reaches record levels
- AFP: Kenyan officials impound two tonnes of ivory: police
- World Wildlife Fund calls on Thailand to ban ivory trade to save African elephants
- 'Airmageddon': China smog raises modernisation doubts
- Beijing choked by pollution at dangerous levels—The "aircocalypse" is here.
- The Scariest Environmental Fact in the World—"China is now burning almost as much coal as the rest of the world—combined."
- Man sells canned fresh air in China. Welcome to yuppie capitalism, comrades.
- You think the air in Beijing is bad, try New Delhi NYT
- Peak oil theories 'increasingly groundless', says BP chief—But BP's report also indicates that, "we will crank the global thermostat up 4°C. "
- Google invests $200 million in Texas wind farm
- Exxon, Chevron Made $71 Billion Profit In 2012 As Consumers Paid Record Gas Prices
- Deregulation in Texas fails to make power more reliable, cheap
- France Will Dim Its Lights To Conserve Energy NYT
- EPA changed course after oil company protested—"[A] confidential report... show[ed] that the EPA had scientific evidence against the driller, Range Resources, but changed course after the company threatened not to cooperate with a national study into a common form of drilling called hydraulic fracturing. Regulators set aside an analysis that concluded the drilling could have been to blame for the contamination."
- The Exxon Valdez spill was in 1989, they still, 21 years later, have not paid the [full] amount awarded in court (a mere $500 million) to those affected and in fact over 8000 people have died while waiting for compensation. Exxon is still in appeals court TODAY. Why would BP act differently?
- Ecuadorean tribe will 'die fighting' to defend rainforest—"Kichwa villagers from Sani Isla vow to resist oil prospecting by state-backed company Petroamazonas at all costs."
- Protecting livelihoods in the Congo basin rainforest
- New York Times Widely Cricitized For Dismantling Its Environment Desk, Eliminating Editorial Positions