The Beginning of the End of the Tar Sands?
It’s a small simple chart which has a huge significance for Canada and the climate.
Read the latest insights and analysis from the experts at Oil Change International.
It’s a small simple chart which has a huge significance for Canada and the climate.
As the fracking industry tries to expand internationally, being promoted as a so-called clean bridge fuel, it is increasingly clear the industry has not one, but two, Achilles heels.
It is no longer a question of "if" the unthinkable happens, but a question of "when". And the “when” could happen sooner than you think. For decades now climate scientists have been worried about what happens if the vast West Antarctic ice sheet melts.
The investigation into Exxon’s twenty-five year climate misinformation campaign is gathering serious momentum.
On Tuesday, Justin Trudeau’s government unveiled their first budget. There’s good news, and there’s bad news.
A new report, entitled Climate Roadbloacks, released by the Sierra Club today reveals how efforts across the United States to protect the climate could be threatened by two proposed trade deals, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).
Imagine you went on a weekend gambling tip to Las Vegas and played roulette, and that you carried on betting on black and yet every time the ball ended up landing on red.
Two of Australia’s most iconic marine national treasures are under threat from climate change and fossil fuel extraction.
TransCanada, the company that tried in vain to build the hugely controversial Keystone XL pipeline (KXL), which would have transported tar sands oil from Canada to the US, is now betting big on fracking gas instead.