What is ‘blue carbon’ and why is it so valuable?
The Pacific Northwest’s once-prevalent tidal forests are mostly gone. But what remains stores an important secret
Growing issue: As energy production increases so do chemical impacts to critical habitats
As the BPA seeks to expand its network of transmission lines, an Oregon salmon stream serves as an example of what can be done without herbicides
The Forest Service is ready to get moving on a big project at Mount St. Helens
Aug. 31 is the deadline to respond to a public questionnaire about changes to the way Spirit Lake is managed
Night skies are getting brighter. This group is pushing back
DarkSky Oregon is lobbying Columbia River Gorge communities to adopt policies that would reduce nighttime illumination
As climate change intensifies, organizations are scaling up by joining forces
Accustomed to working in silos, land trusts are realizing fractured efforts to save the environment won’t cut it
Can native turtles in the Gorge be saved?
Listed as endangered since 1993, efforts are underway to rebuild northwestern pond turtle populations and biodiversity in the Gorge
Washington v. Army fight over PFAS contamination escalates
The Department of Ecology has sent the U.S. Army a legal demand to clean a training center that contaminated residential wells with “forever chemicals”
Good day for journalism: The Dalles, Google abdicate in water fight with Oregonian
The tech giant’s bankrolling of the city’s legal fees continues to blur the line between public and private interests