Why rich nations must pay for climate damage
Damage from increasingly extreme weather events is falling especially hard on developing countries, even though they have done the least to contribute to climate change. At the upcoming UN climate talks, rich nations must begin to compensate them for their mounting losses, writes Bill McKibben.
If the world ran on sun, it wouldn’t fight over oil
The climate crisis isn’t the only reason to kick fossil fuels – the prospect of a war to protect Saudi crude reminds us of that
The Globe and Mail didn't want to publish this about Kinder Morgan
When I checked my email one day last week, there was a link to a piece just published in The Globe and Mail. A columnist named Gary Mason had used me as his foil to prove that protests against the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain pipeline expansion were subversive plots imported from the U.S., part of a grand overall strategy to mess with the fossil fuel industry.
Horgan's climate sanity project?
British Columbia is a key cork in the climate change bottle, keeping a giant share of the planet’s carbon underground, writes U.S. environmentalist, journalist, and book author Bill McKibben.
Bill McKibben: Trudeau can't charm his way around the mathematics of climate change
The Trudeau government's go-ahead to a massive natural gas project "defies the unassailable arithmetic of climate change"