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High Country News

High Country News

A nonprofit independent magazine of unblinking journalism that shines a light on all of the complexities of the West.

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Coal

Posted inArticles

Trump vs. Biden on the climate

by Jonathan Thompson May 31, 2024August 8, 2024

The next presidential election will have huge ramifications for the planet.

Posted inArticles

The good, the bad and the ugly of the state legislative season

by Jonathan Thompson February 29, 2024February 28, 2024

While Congress does nothing, Western state lawmakers pass a flurry of consequential and/or crazy — bills.

Posted inArticles

New Mexico’s displaced coal miners have gotten the shaft on severance pay

by Nick Bowlin November 7, 2023January 31, 2024

The state’s just transition plans promised by the Energy Transition Act haven’t panned out for many workers.

Posted inSeptember 1, 2023: Food Justice

Revisiting the Rock Springs Massacre

by Teow Lim Goh September 1, 2023January 24, 2024

In 1885, white coal miners in Wyoming Territory, murdered at least 28 Chinese men and ran the rest of the Chinese out of town at gunpoint. These artworks bring that history back to the present.

Posted inMay 1, 2023: Reemergence

How a dinosaur is redefining a rural coal town

by Derek Maiolo May 1, 2023January 24, 2024

The 74 million-year-old fossil of Walter the hadrosaur brings paleo-tourism to Craig, Colorado.

Students and community members demand President Biden stop the Willow Project by unfurling a banner on the Ellipse outside the White House in December 2022 in Washington, DC.
Posted inArticles

The Willow project is part of a larger trend: energy colonialism

by Jonathan Thompson March 16, 2023January 24, 2024

Five decades ago, the late Navajo Nation President Peterson Zah described America’s ‘power madness.’

Posted inArticles

Is carbon capture the solution for jobs and climate action in fossil fuel country?

by Nicholas Kusnetz December 6, 2022January 24, 2024

A project in Wyoming’s coal region brings the new technology, but critics say it carries unacceptable risks.

Posted inDecember 1, 2022: Beyond Illusion

Carbon capture convolution

by Jonathan Thompson December 1, 2022January 24, 2024

A complicated process, explained.

Posted inSeptember 1, 2022: Going Under

Can ravaged economies be healed with a restoration industry?

by Jonathan Thompson August 29, 2022January 24, 2024

Cleaning up the West could be as lucrative as wrecking it.

Posted inArticles

Climate game changer? Or fossil fuel giveaway?

by Jonathan Thompson August 5, 2022January 24, 2024

A break down of the Inflation Reduction Act.

Posted inSeptember 1, 2022: Going Under

The EPA has more options to rein in climate change than you think

by Elizabeth Shogren July 14, 2022January 24, 2024

There are still many ways to shut down major polluters — including some options the agency isn’t using.

Posted inArticles

In Alaska, coal is dwindling as green energy is on the rise

by Victoria Petersen July 13, 2022January 24, 2024

The closure of Healy Unit 2 signals a rise in renewable energy projects around Alaska.

Posted inArticles

The San Juan Basin’s fossil fuel transition slowed by economic and cultural bonds

by Jonathan Thompson June 30, 2022January 24, 2024

The region’s history with prosperity in the oil and gas industry looms over conversations about how to diversify its economy.

Posted inArticles

Will carbon capture help clean New Mexico’s power, or delay its transition?

by Jonathan Thompson June 29, 2022January 24, 2024

A virtually unknown company has a $1.4 billion plan to extend the life of the state’s largest coal-fired power plant. Critics say it’s likely to be a costly distraction from a just transition.

Posted inArticles

New Mexico’s landmark coal transition law faces an uncertain timeline

by Jonathan Thompson June 28, 2022January 24, 2024

Despite momentum in 2017, drought and supply chain problems are complicating the shift from fossil fuels.

Posted inJuly 1, 2022: Living with Rivers

Your ears will perk up at these new Western podcasts

by Kylie Mohr June 15, 2022January 24, 2024

Four new podcasts envision change in juvenile justice, energy and ranching.

Posted inArticles

What the Ukraine war means for Western lands

by Jonathan Thompson May 12, 2022August 8, 2024

War hawks and climate hawks alike are calling for energy independence.

Posted inMay 1, 2022: New Ways of Seeing the West

Cows, coal and climate change: A Q&A with the new BLM director

by Kylie Mohr April 15, 2022January 24, 2024

Tracy Stone-Manning discusses how the federal agency sees conservation, the climate crisis and the Indigenous history of public lands.

Posted inMarch 1, 2022: The Cloning Conundrum

The place that coal built and fire burned

by Kate Schimel February 7, 2022January 24, 2024

Extractive industry laid the infrastructure for the suburban sprawl that fueled Colorado’s destructive Marshall Fire.

Posted inArticles

Will the EPA partially close a Wyoming coal plant that’s one of the nation’s largest polluters?

by Nick Bowlin February 4, 2022January 24, 2024

The decision affects the local economy and air quality — and could create an opening for renewable energy.

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