As prices climb, mining proposals proliferate. But it might just be hype.
Jonathan Thompson
Jonathan Thompson is a contributing editor at High Country News. He is the author of Sagebrush Empire: How a Remote Utah County Became the Battlefront of American Public Lands. Follow him @LandDesk
12 not-so-easy steps to decarbonize the grid
Electrifying will make a difference if that power comes from clean sources.
Is Biden waging a war on energy? Or on the climate?
A year-end review of the administration’s policy on fossil fuels and public lands.
The Endangered Species Act by the numbers
Half a century of wins and losses.
Pondering public lands and the energy transition conundrum
Fighting the climate crisis will require difficult choices.
Outrage, disinformation and threats rise up in Wyoming around a BLM land plan
Is there a new Sagebrush Rebellion flaring in the Cowboy State?
New legislation is creating a clean-energy project pulse
Will the manufacturing renaissance finally displace fossil fuels?
Could the 151-year-old mining law finally be reformed?
A working group calls for reforms in advance of a green metals boom.
Public lands had a roller coaster month
Rounding up the Biden administration’s ups and downs on land policy.
Who owns the West?
Increasingly, land is shifting into the hands of billionaires.
An antiquated law rules mining in the West
Can the U.S. finally vanquish one of the most enduring Lords of Yesterday?
The West sizzles — even at midnight
Climate change and the urban heat islands take their toll from Phoenix to Portland.
Public education in the West is running short of funds
Is the ‘grand foundation’ crumbling?
Public Lands Rule rhetoric gets wacky
Conservatives aren’t so keen on conservation.
A dizzying look back from Phoenix’s future
A sci-fi scenario from 2008 offers insight into present day news.
Geothermal: Hot or not?
This old, abundant, relatively clean energy source has barely been tapped.
Utah’s latest attack on the Antiquities Act
The bid to diminish national monuments threatens landscape preservation.
The breakdown on the Colorado River ‘breakthrough’ water deal
The agreement isn’t the sustainable, permanent one that’s necessary.
Can the Dolores River be saved?
A beleaguered Colorado waterway garners new attention.
Seeking sanctuary on a warming planet
Scientists look to identify, map and preserve climate change refugia.
