A forest smolders in Byshiv, Ukraine following fighting, March 27, 2022.

As the war in Ukraine drags on, scientists are increasingly concerned about the environmental consequences of the destruction. From forests ignited by shelling to wrecked factories spewing pollution to precarious nuclear plants, the long-term impacts could be profound.

By Fred Pearce

  • E360 Film Contest Winner

    In Indonesian Mining Region, the EV Boom Takes a Heavy Toll

    The green electric vehicle revolution has a decidedly dirty side, and the Winner of the 2022 Yale Environment 360 Film Contest — “From Dreams to Dust” — vividly tells the story of the high cost of nickel mining through the life of an Indonesian mine worker.

  • E360 Film Contest

    The Three Cricketeers: Betting on Bug Food to Help the Planet

    A family in Minnesota wants to put crickets on your dinner plate. In the First Runner-Up in the 2022 Yale Environment 360 Film Contest, they explain how the insects are a high-protein food that can help reduce the massive emissions produced by livestock and large-scale farming.

  • Cities

    How Using Nature’s Tools Is Helping to Clean Up Urban Rivers

    In the Delaware River and other waterways and estuaries across the United States, scientists and conservationists are restoring aquatic vegetation and beds of mussels and oysters to fight pollution and create a strong foundation for healthy ecosystems.

    By Katherine Rapin

E360 FILM CONTEST

Spirit in the Woods: A Thai Community Protects Its Forest

“We and the Woods,” the Second Runner-Up in the 2022 Yale Environment 360 Film Contest, tells the story of an ascetic community in western Thailand whose residents have a deep connection to the forest and have banded together to protect their woodlands from logging, tourism projects, and other development.

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Sheep graze alongside a solar array in Dubbo, Australia.

Energy

More Energy on Less Land: The Drive to Shrink Solar’s Footprint

With the push for renewables leading to land-use conflicts, building highly efficient utility-scale solar farms on ever-smaller tracts of land has become a top priority. New approaches range from installing PV arrays that take up less space to growing crops between rows of panels.

By Cheryl Katz

  • E360 Film Contest

    In Nebraska, Bighorn Sheep Reclaim Their Former High Plains Home

    In “High Plains Wild” — the Third Runner-Up in the 2022 Yale Environment 360 Film Contest — filmmaker Mariah Lundgren tells the story of efforts by wildlife biologists, conservationists, and landowners to reintroduce and sustain the magnificent bighorn sheep in Nebraska.

  • Climate

    Shifting Sands: Carolina’s Outer Banks Face a Precarious Future

    Despite the risks of building on barrier islands, developers kept constructing homes on North Carolina’s Outer Banks. Now, as sea level rises and storms become more frequent and powerful, the famed vacation spot is fighting an increasingly difficult battle to keep from washing away.

    By Gilbert M. Gaul

  • Solutions

    Bringing Back the Beasts: Global Rewilding Plans Take Shape

    With a growing number of studies demonstrating the importance of large mammals to healthy ecosystems, scientists are proposing concrete plans to reintroduce these animals to the wild. The return of just 20 species to native habitats, they say, could be a boon to biodiversity.

    By Janet Marinelli

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