WhoWhatWhy’s Best Climate and Environment Stories for 2024

December 25, 2024


Climate change and myriad other environmental crises were not meaningfully addressed in 2024. But WhoWhatWhy and our Covering Climate Now partners remained dedicated to bringing you news on all of it.

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From WhoWhatWhy

COP28, logo, oil barrel
Photo credit: Illustration by WhoWhatWhy from COP28 / Wikimedia and PublicDomainPictures / Pixabay.

COP28: No Final Solution, But the Writing Is on the Wall

Nothing was resolved at the COP28 Conference on Climate Change except the growing conviction that the days of fossil fuels are numbered. WhoWhatWhy’s Kennedy Maize analyzed the outcomes of Dubai’s COP28. Read more.


storm, ocean, hurricane
A hurricane making landfall. Photo credit: Michelle Raponi / Pixabay

Billion-Dollar Climate Disasters Soar in 2023

In the US in 2023, billion-dollar climate disasters claimed the lives of nearly 500 people and cost over $90 billion. Yet a significant segment of the country continues to deny the reality of climate change. We evaluate the statistics behind the natural disasters of 2023 — and were not at all surprised when storms in 2024 added to the toll. Read more.


Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska is the breeding place for many birds. Photo credit: Lisa Hupp / USFWS

Donald Trump Drills Deep Into the Pocket of Fossil Fuel

Look at Trump’s words under a microscope. What do you see? Russ Baker saw at the beginning of the year exactly how dangerous Donald Trump and his commitment to the fossil fuel industry will be in the event of Trump’s reelection. Read more.


Fionn Ferreira, Removing microplastics, water
Fionn Ferreira: Removing microplastics from water. Photo credit: European Patent Office / YouTube

Life in the Plastocene: Solutions to the Plastics Plague

There was life before plastics. Is it realistic to hope there will be life after them? For Earth Day, Russ Baker examines the damage wrought by 70 years of indiscriminate plastic use. Read more.


Furiosa: a Mad Max Saga
Photo credit: Warner Brothers

Furiosa and the Spectacular Joys of the Climate Crisis

“There will still be Mondays after doomsday.” Brandon R. Reynolds reviews “Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga” as a piece of “cli-fi,” or climate fiction. He comes to the conclusion that viewers and consumers of cli-fi assume the responsibility to do something about the very real climate crisis upon leaving the theater. Read more.


Seattle, Lid i-5 Project, artist's rendering
Artist’s rendering of the Seattle Lid I-5 Project. Photo credit: City of Springfield, OR

Gridlocked: How the US Addiction to Cars Jeopardizes Safety and Climate Goals

While the public grows louder in their demands for sustainable transportation options, elected officials continue to support car-centric policies, placing the nation in gridlock. WhoWhatWhy apprentice Grace Spiegel examines the American car addiction at the University of Oregon. Read more.


From Our Covering Climate Now Partners

Portrait of Lyndon B. Johnson at the LBJ ranch near Stonewall, TX, 1972. Photo credit: LBJ Library

A US President Was First Informed of CO2’s Impact 59 Years Ago Last Month

A 1965 memo to Lyndon Baines Johnson disclosed the link between CO2 emissions and climate change — showing federal climate action could have started decades sooner. DeSmog’s Rebecca John dives into the story behind the memo, the hopes for an ambitious environmental program, and the devastating consequences of our failure to act. Read more.


Chile’s BASE Millennium Institute researchers during the expedition that first confirmed H5N1 in Adélie penguins and Antarctic cormorants. Summer 2023/24. Photo credit: Fabiola León / Daily Maverick

Behind the Ice Curtain: Antarctic Treaty Talks Hide Looming Bird Flu Catastrophe

Cash-strapped scientists in Antarctica face ‘unimaginable’ challenges — from sampling a lethal virus on floating ice to fighting a ‘climate’ threat that could kill millions of wildlife, and even humans. Despite calls for global assistance, 29 states meeting in India this spring remained entrenched in Cold War-era secrecy. Tiara Walters reports for the Daily Maverick. Read more.


Painting, Henry C. Pitz, John Wesley Powell, Colorado River
Painting by Henry C. Pitz showing John Wesley Powell and his party descending the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon, presumably during the historic 1869 expedition. Photo credit: Smithsonian Institution / Bureau of American Ethnology / NPS

When Will Climate Change Turn Life in the US Upside Down?

Intensifying extreme weather events and an insurance crisis are likely to cause significant economic and political disruption in the US sometime in the next 15 years. For Yale Climate Connections, Jeff Masters takes a 7,000 word deep dive into the climate catastrophes coming for the United States. Read more.


Prison, guard house, Del Sur, CA, 2008
Prison guard house in Del Sur, CA, October 23, 2008. Photo credit: Rennett Stowe / Flickr (CC BY 2.0 DEED)

CA Inmates Urgently Need Workplace Heat Standards — But State Has Delayed Them

Where prisons are located, the way they are built, and the health condition of prisoners means deaths will likely increase with climate change, experts say. Capital & Main’s Hilary Beaumont details the heat-related suffering of tens of thousands of California inmates and the state’s refusal to take action. Read more.


Climate accountability, Trump
Photo credit: Tess Abbot / ExxonKnews

Climate Accountability Under Trump: The Courts

The outlook for climate action in the US is grim, but there’s a separate path forward for accountability in the courts. In Part 1 of an ExxonKnews series examining what holding the fossil fuel industry accountable looks like under the incoming Trump administration, Emily Sanders takes a look at what’s next for the legal battle against Big Oil. Read more.


Kakhovka, Dam, reservoir
A forest emerges in place of the Kakhovka Dam reservoir. Photo credit: Serhiiy Skoryk (used with permission) via The Revelator

‘Like a Phoenix’: A New Forest Emerges From the Destruction in Ukraine

Russia’s bombing of Kakhovka Dam in 2023 killed hundreds of people and tens of thousands of animals, but it has also provided a potential ecological reset. For The Revelator, Ruchi Kumar takes us to experience the unexpected reblossoming of nature in the delta of the Dnieper River. Read more.


 

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