Environmental News

MPR News is your source for environment news from Minnesota and across the country.

Getting to Green: Minnesota’s energy future

Getting to Green is an MPR News series that shares stories about Minnesota’s clean energy transition, including what needs to be done to get there.

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Climate Cast

Listen to Climate Cast, the MPR News podcast all about our changing climate and its impact in Minnesota and worldwide.

Solar is now the 'cheapest energy in history'
Solar projects are now roughly half the price of coal and natural gas projects.
'Pure devastation': Rainy Lake residents fill sandbags, fight exhaustion as floodwaters rise
About 250 homes have suffered some sort of damage on the south shore of Rainy Lake, east of International Falls on the Minnesota-Canadian border. It’s a slow-motion crisis that may not start to ebb until mid to late June.
New funding expands chronic wasting disease research
The Minnesota Legislature approved more than $4 million in funding for research into chronic wasting disease, an always fatal neurological disease in deer and other cervids.
National Eagle Center expands facilities and mission
The National Eagle Center in Wabasha will open June 3 after a six month renovation and expansion. The center plans to expand the reach of current education efforts and advocacy for eagles.
Replanting a resilient forest in the ashes of the Greenwood Fire
Last summer the Greenwood Fire destroyed a dozen cabins in northeastern Minnesota and scorched more than 40 square miles of forest. Now, work is underway to replant the burn area with more than 100,000 trees, to make the forest more diverse and resilient.
With 40 percent of food getting wasted, what are your strategies for wasting less?
Wasted food could instead help feed people who are struggling financially. And if we cut down our food waste, we are helping to cut back greenhouse gas emissions. How do you try to avoid wasting food in your home? MPR News host Angela Davis discussed with expert guests about how we can prevent food waste.
Deaths of 3 women in early Chicago heat wave raise questions, fears
What happened this month is a reminder that the safeguards in place to make sure people don't freeze to death because they have not paid their heating bills often do not exist to prevent people from overheating in their homes.