After four years and 100 episodes, we take a look at the biggest rollbacks of the Trump administration, and the impacts on climate change, science and public lands. It's an episode you don't want to miss.
In a last-minute push, the Trump administration is auctioning off drilling rights in the Alaskan wilderness. Can Biden stop it?
Read MoreWhat does Biden's win mean for the environment and the fight to rein in climate change?
Read MoreMany of President Trump's environmental actions have faced court challenges. So how’s the administration doing?
Read MoreWhat does the loss of Ruth Bader Ginsburg mean for the environment?
Read MoreThere's a legal strategy at play aimed at future climate regulations.
Read MoreRecent actions by the Trump Administration have scientists fired up. Many are asking if the federal government is now anti-science. Three scientists explain why they are speaking out.
Read MoreIt’s been a week of big changes — and turmoil — at the Environmental Protection Agency. First, President Trump ordered a freeze on EPA grants and contracts and barred anyone at the agency from communicating with the public. Then, in a stance which flies in the face of the agency’s current scientific integrity policy, a White House official announced that EPA research may be subject to review by the administration. Seriously, you keeping up? So to get some perspective on it all, we reached out to Christine Todd Whitman, former head of the EPA under George W. Bush.
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