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Cloe Logan

Cloe Logan

Journalist | Halifax
About Cloe Logan

Cloe Logan is Canada's National Observer's Atlantic reporter covering climate, the environment and politics. Cloe has also contributed to reporting on federal policy thanks to a grant from the Local Journalism Initiative and the Government of Canada.

After graduating from the Langara Journalism program, Cloe worked as a staff reporter for the Parksville Qualicum Beach News on Vancouver Island covering municipal politics. Prior to that, she contributed to an investigation into inauthentic Indigenous art sold in Vancouver's souvenir shops with The Discourse.


In 2023, Cloe received a silver award at the Atlantic Journalism Awards for her three part series on Canada's only underground coal mine in the digital long form category. She was also awarded a fellowship from the Metcalf Institute, which included a week at the University of Rhode Island learning about the natural, social, and engineering research guiding an equitable transition to clean energy.

In 2024, Cloe's story A tale of two coasts received a bronze award in the Long Feature Category at the Atlantic Journalism Awards.

360 Articles

How a hotter planet revs up our weather

We know climate change is making extreme weather events like wildfires and hurricanes more severe, but what may be less obvious is how changes in the climate — caused largely by the burning of fossil fuels — connect to weather patterns.

Ontario’s clean power plan that’s ‘not really a plan’

The roadmap, unveiled Monday, “doesn't forecast what kind of a supply mix Ontario is going to have in the future. It doesn't make a commitment to net zero in any year ... it doesn't really forecast and talk about the price of electricity going forward because it's not forward-looking,” said Keith Brooks, programs director at Environmental Defence.