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.

Twin Metals sues over mineral leases near Boundary Waters
Twin Metals wants to hold onto federal leases needed to pursue a controversial $2.8 billion underground copper-nickel mine near the Boundary Waters.
ND pipeline protester: It's about our rights as native people
Protesters continue to gather at the site of a proposed oil pipeline despite Friday's announcement that the government would pause construction on federally-owned land.
Council members will vote on a resolution asking for hearings before an administrative law judge before the state ultimately decides whether to approve the controversial copper-nickel mine.
A Siberian river has mysteriously turned blood red
Alarmed Russians are sharing photos on social media of the red Daldykan River, located above the Arctic Circle. The Russian government thinks a pipeline leak from a local factory could be to blame.
Warming waters: Lake Superior nearly breaks water temperature record
Another warm summer water year for Lake Superior is consistent with long-term trends; big lakes like Superior are warming, and fast.
Yosemite grows in largest expansion since 1949
The new addition to the park, a stretch of land along the western boundary of Yosemite, has historically been used for logging and cattle grazing.
More than a year after spill, Colorado's Gold King Mine named Superfund site
Thirteen months after an Environmental Protection Agency mistake sent millions of gallons of bright orange wastewater into a Colorado river, the agency has announced a cleanup for the Gold King Mine.
North Dakota's chief archaeologist to inspect pipeline site for cultural artifacts
North Dakota's chief archaeologist is planning to visit an area along the Dakota Access pipeline where Standing Rock Sioux officials say they've identified cultural artifacts. If any artifacts are found, pipeline work would cease.