Our environment is changing, habitats are being altered, and wildlife are feeling the effects.
The largest tar sands reserves in the world are located beneath the boreal forest in Alberta, Canada. The proposed Keystone XL pipeline poses a threat to critical habitat for whooping cranes and other wildlife.
Polluters are attacking the Clean Air Act and urging their allies in Congress to erase the public health warnings of the nation's top scientists.
How is global warming affecting our planet? Why is it so critical that we act now?
Learn about our work to safeguard wildlife and our natural world from the worst impacts of global warming.
You can make a difference every day. Little changes to how we use energy, what products we buy, or even gardening can help curb global warming.
Our Campus Ecology program gives students the ideas and the resources to implement greening projects on their college or university campus.
Schools can do their part for the environment, too. Sustainable consumption and environmental education have dramatic benefits for the school, the students, the community, and the planet.
Help design laws that stimulate a green economy and also help conservation practices adapt to the new climate challenges.
Reduce your environmental impact by learning easy ways to save energy and water, purchase products that are safer for wildlife, and more.
Find out how colleges and universities across the country are leading the way in Sustainability 101.
Download climate change curriculum and also find out how K-12 schools are becoming "Eco-Schools."
Now is your chance to support limits on global warming pollution from coal-burning power plants.