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Babies born near natural gas flaring are 50 percent more likely to be premature: Study
Living near fracking operations that frequently engage in flaring—the process of burning off excess natural […]
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Diversity and community focus: The future of science communication
As editor of EHN, I’ve long sought out reporters who can tell stories of environmental […]
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Big Oil flows a little bit backward
Think for a minute how much the world’s energy profile has changed in the past […]
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The dangers of opinion masquerading as fact in science journals: Jerrold J. Heindel
An article written by a group of 19 toxicologists has been published verbatim in eight […]
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Beyond the “silver lining” of emissions reductions: Clean energy takes a COVID-19 hit
In early March, the Washington state legislature passed a community solar incentives bill meant to […]
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Blaming the COVID-19 messengers—public health officials under siege: Derrick Z. Jackson
The vilification of public health officials in the COVID-19 crisis reminds us of their vital […]
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Join the “Agents of Change” discussion on research and activism
Want to hear more from our “Agents of Change?” Here’s your chance. On July 30, […]
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Op-ed: PFAS chemicals—the other immune system threat
“In 2014, my world changed forever when I learned my family was exposed to contaminated […]
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Chesapeake Energy’s fall
Historians generally place the invention of fracking in a gas field in southwestern Kansas in […]
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The danger of hormone-mimicking chemicals in medical devices and meds
Exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals in medicine and medical devices is grossly underestimated, and physicians have […]