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Monday, November 25, 2024

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Environment

Can Burning Man ever be carbon neutral?

We hear a lot of talk. The reality on the ground is different—and a professor from SF State is gathering the data

How to shut down a bank

Wells Fargo protest could be a sign of more climate action against the companies that finance oil and gas exploration.

How to film ‘How to Blow up a Pipeline’

Daniel Goldhaber’s eco-thriller aims to 'encourage people to do what they think is right' about the climate crisis.

This land is whose land?

The developer and the city insist the Hunters Point Shipyard is safe for development. There's a lot of data that says otherwise. Part III of a series.

The city’s climate plan will cost money; will Breed support progressive taxes to pay for it?

Plus: A long-awaited hearing on the city's reparations plan—and a debate over more money for the cops. That's The Agenda for March 12-19

The Hunters Point Shipyard: Art survives amid toxic waste

Part II: As artists move into the former base, the level of contamination reaches the point where 'if it can't be cleaned, stay the hell out.'

The tragic toxic legacy of the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard

Aided by a USC fellowship, reporter Tom Molanphy and 48hills dug into the overwhelming history of data concerning the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, which...

After death, returning your body to the Earth

Human composting is cheaper and more environmentally sound than traditional burials or cremation.

Is it safe? Treasure Island residents face health concerns from toxic dust

The dirt on the island was contaminated. Now it's flying around in the air.

Haney, Ting, and Wiener all back $1.4 billion PG&E nuke bailout bill

SF's delegation goes along with a deal to keep the dangerous Diablo Canyon alive—at taxpayer expense. And none of them want to talk about it.

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