Inside Cascade PBS Covering climate change means watching the Washington you love fade away A reporter reflects on the disappearing hallmarks of the region’s natural spaces. by Hannah Weinberger / August 31, 2021
Environment Inside the latest Indigenous push to stop a massive copper mine For years, backers of the Pebble Mine above Bristol Bay seemed to be grinding ahead. Alaska Natives in the region have thrown new sand in those gears. by Ashley Braun / August 30, 2021 / Updated at 12:35 p.m. on Aug. 30, 2021
Environment How the Puget Sound region is changing the way zoos operate A local movement to help people empathize with animals is changing the way zoos around the country do their work. by Hannah Weinberger / August 27, 2021
Environment Podcast | Climate change and the future of outdoor adventuring Is it still ethical to ski and hike? How is raising a kid to love the outdoors changing? The director of the UW Climate Impacts Group talks us through those questions. by Mark Baumgarten / August 27, 2021
Environment How the West’s divided electric grid slows green growth A hodgepodge of utilities run the West’s electrical grid. Will billions in federal funding help them get along? by Peter Fairley InvestigateWest / August 25, 2021
Environment Searching for clues to climate change at the bottom of the world How a chat in a Portland pub led to a trek to the tip of South America to find the southernmost tree. by Kristian Foden-Vencil OPB / August 23, 2021
Culture Support for this article is provided by Port of Seattle. A master beekeeper explains what a world without bees would mean Without these buzzy pollinators, the food on our plates could look — and taste — a lot different. by Sarah Hoffman / August 23, 2021
Environment Support for this article is provided by Port of Seattle. Using Indigenous knowledge to reclaim food sovereignty Native chefs, educators and nutritionists are showing that environmental justice and food justice are inextricably linked. by Beatriz Costa Lima / August 20, 2021
Environment More mosquitoes in WA could come with hotter, longer summers Climatologists, entomologists and public health experts worry our sunny, mostly bugless summers in the PNW could soon be a thing of the past. by Hannah Weinberger / August 20, 2021
Environment Support for this article is provided by Port of Seattle. Utilizar los conocimientos indígenas para recuperar la soberanía alimentaria Chefs, educadores y nutricionistas nativos demuestran los vínculos inextricables entre justicia ambiental y justicia alimentaria. by Beatriz Costa Lima / August 20, 2021