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Grist - The e-zine delivers news and news-you-can-use on pivotal topics with punny, sometimes corny headlines.
Treehugger.com - the go-to guide and news feed for sustainable living.
DotEarth - On Dot Earth, a relatively new, must-read newspaper blog, Revkin's commentary roams from inspiring to enlightening to plain old silly.
Climate Change - Britain's 188-year-old Guardian newspaper documents and shapes this future, with fresh, smart and edgy takes on climate,
Real Climate - An assembly of climate researchers gives readers what's lacking virtually everywhere else straightforward presentation of the physical evidence for global warming, discussed with patience, precision and rigor, and, quite often, length.
Environmental Capital - the Wall Street Journal's spotlight on this central trend, a meaty, up-to-the-minute service fed by scrappy, tireless, and above all professional reporters not activists, advocates or observers in their jammies. This blog is a live textbook for understanding the hole we're in, and how we're trying to climb out of it even as we dig ourselves deeper.
No Impact Man -
a blog by Colin Beavan, a self-described guilty liberal who "finally snaps, swears off plastic, goes organic, becomes a bicycle nut, turns off his power, composts his poop and, while living in New York City, generally turns into a tree-hugging lunatic.
EcoGeek - EcoGeek is porn for hardcore science, tech and enviro freaks: the site's posts run the gamut, from hybrid cars and air-powered motorcycles to sustainable, eco-friendly dollhouses, plus practical guides for "decarbonizing" your life.
Ecorazzi - If you want to know what rock stars, fashion designers, actors and other celebs are doing to green the Earth, look no further than Ecorazzi.
Switchboard - One-stop shopping for commentary on far-flung topics: what parks add to cities; why greens and business make good bedfellows; why there is a black market for bees. Switchboard is a bullpen of Natural Resources Defense Council specialists monitoring the changes we face within the shadow of a changing climate.
Mongabay - Named for a small island off Madagascar, Mongabay delivers news, commentary, and educational material about the world's biological treasures, from the Congo to the Pacific Rim to the Amazon.
Climate Ethics - ClimateEthics is both sober and sobering, a mature, dispassionate look at how global warming changes the meaning of personal and aggregate right and wrong. In this realm, answers are sometimes hard to hear, and even more difficult to implement.
Climate Progress - a project of the liberal Center for American Progress, counters bad science and inane rhetoric with original analysis delivered sharply, usually with either humor or incredulity or both. Romm occupies the intersection of climate science, economics and policy.
WorldChanging - WorldChanging lifts the veil from hidden opportunities for smarter living that are all around us. The site has a lovely consistency of tone, and talks about smart products, ideas, trends, and sustainable conveniences. And all of it is ingeniously organized by the scale of change you feel you're up to from "Stuff" and "Shelter" to "Community" and "Cities," up to and including the "Planet" itself.
PlanetArk - Reuters' Daily World Environment News Service, a steady ticker of wire stories covering all topics from Acid rain to Zoos. The site's organizers complement the wire reports with their own green campaigns designed to propel Oz toward a more sustainable future.
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