OPINION: Tackling fossil fuel use is our greatest public health challenge
A new study finds outdoor air pollution from burning fossil fuels is significantly more harmful to health than thought, linking it to over 8 million premature deaths in 2018
Fossil fuel pollution causes one in five premature deaths globally - study
Parts of China, India, Europe and northeastern U.S. are among the hardest-hit areas, suffering a disproportionately high share of 8.7 million annual deaths attributed to fossil fuels, says new study
Lesbian mother of stateless baby takes citizenship fight to top EU court
Hearing at Court of Justice of the European Union seen as test case for "rainbow families" in Europe
Rising heat and snow-bare peaks chill Nepal's mountain economy
Hurting from COVID travel restrictions, tourist towns were relying on local visitors - but lack of snow related to climate change means few have come
Indigenous people 'under threat' from Asia clean energy push
Clean energy projects receive government incentives and less scrutiny, and few have policies to minimise human rights abuses
Hackers try to contaminate Florida town's water supply through computer breach
FBI helps investigate cyberattack on water facility near Tampa in which hackers tried to increase levels of lye in the supply
Scientists warn over misuse of climate models in financial markets
Researchers call for new forms of climate projection to support financial sector, backed by 'climate translators' to help regulators, investors and companies make better use of the science
UN urges 57 countries to reclaim women, children from Syrian camps
The states have a duty to repatriate their citizens and to prosecute adults for war crimes or other offences at fair trials in their domestic courts under international law
Mexico's vaccines plan raises fears migrants will miss out
Mexico’s vaccination plan risks excluding the more than a million Mexicans estimated to have no birth certificate, as well as thousands of undocumented migrants in the country
Author Naomi Wolf defends LGBT+ history book accused of inaccuracy
The book detailing Britain's history of sodomy laws has come under fire for the second time after a corrected version was published in November