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.

Submit a question or story for Getting to Green here.

Climate Cast

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

Meet the White House's new chief climate change skeptic
William Happer, a Princeton scientist who is doubtful of the dangers of climate change, appears to be leading a White House challenge to the government's conclusion that global warming is a threat.
Mpls. council to vote on Upper Harbor Terminal plan, some say it's too soon
The Minneapolis City Council is expected to vote Friday on a plan to develop land north of downtown on the Mississippi River. But some north Minneapolis residents don't agree with some parts of the plan and feel ignored in the process.
Minn. snowfall records might be aided by climate change
Record snow amid climate change might seem paradoxical. But overall increases in snowfall and larger individual storms align with what climate models predict will happen as the planet warms.
Tribe says Army Corps' Dakota Access pipeline findings preordained
The Native American tribe leading the fight against the Dakota Access oil pipeline said Thursday that an Army Corps of Engineers document shows the agency concluded the pipeline won't unfairly affect tribes before it consulted them.
The National Weather Service in the Twin Cities has issued its initial spring flood outlook for the Minnesota, Upper Mississippi, and western Wisconsin river basins, showing a higher than usual flood potential.
Scientists say there's still time to save Minnesota from invasive wetland plant
A fast-growing invasive grass is spreading across Minnesota in wetlands and along lakes and rivers. Scientists say there's still time to control the plant before it causes serious environmental damage.
Farm-caused pollution worsening on the Red River
A report on the health of the Red River finds that water rushing off of efficiently drained farm fields is bringing more sediment and phosphorus to the river. The runoff is harming aquatic life in the river and contributing to significant algal blooms downstream in Lake Winnipeg.