Agnes Walton
Denmark's teens have a drinking problem. VR could be the cure.
Denmark topped the ranking for Europe’s booziest teens in a recent World Health Organization survey
This is how Spanish coal miners are dealing with the government-mandated closing of their industry
Spain says it’s possible to quit coal and compensate miners
PHOTOS: We went underground with some of Spain’s last coal miners
La Escondida remains the last functioning coal mine in El Bierzo, a region scattered with shuttered mines, in the far north of Spain.
Illinois and Nevada are fighting over where to store nuclear waste
President Trump’s Department of Energy has expressed interest in restarting research and development at Yucca Mountain in Nevada.
If you've got a driver’s license and a pulse, you could be making $100,000 a year in the West Texas oil boom
There's a huge oil boom happening in Texas right now — where a single oilfield is set to overtake Iran in production.
These families are at the mercy of pipeline companies that want to build across their backyards
Louisiana is a unique place for oil and gas companies. If they say they need your land, they can use it
Scott Pruitt is gone, but his legacy at the EPA will last for years
An effective administrator but for the wrong reasons if you're an environmentalist.
An activist is using religion to get Scott Pruitt to care about the environment
Patrick Carolan recently got a private meeting with the EPA chief where they talked about the intersection of environmentalism and faith.
How leaving the Paris climate deal will cost the U.S. trillions of dollars
President Trump basically made a multitrillion-dollar gamble that climate change is a Chinese hoax.
Scott Pruitt's crowd-sourced legal defense fund could become "snake pit for conflicts"
His plan to crowdfund his legal expenses might be another way for lobbyists to curry favor
China is celebrating its climate change success — even though emissions are still going up
China's growing economy is partly to blame for a sudden spike in global emissions.
California’s scum ranchers are working on a fuel to replace oil
Researchers are using algae to clean polluted water in the hopes it will become a renewable source of fuel.