The innovative and refillable Replenish spray bottle could be a truly disruptive product, reducing and reusing first, and recycling later.

Earth Day, in its current form, is an abomination. Let's infuse it with a modicum of meaning.

The 8th annual Buy Nothing Day is here with creative calls to supplant shopping trips with community, parades, and empty shopping cart meet-ups.

Taking inspiration from the dozens of faux Q&As sent to me throughout the year by the PR departments of the corporate food world, I thought I...

Earth Hour is founded on a metaphor—turning off the lights—that does the climate movement more harm than good.

Edward Morris argues that the White House Chief of Staff is to blame for not prioritizing climate change policy in the United States. Here's why.

NASA maps show global temperature anomalies by decade, leaving no doubt whatsoever about our planet's warming trend.

The famed phonebook company is at long last making a serious push to stop delivering their product to people who don't need it.

The president said he wanted to support nuclear power, but no new nuclear power plants have come online in years. What's holding us back?

The company's new "new long-term vision": 100 percent renewable energy, 100 percent sustainable packaging, zero waste. Not too shabby.
Can the pink ribbon be saved from corporate cause marketing, and actually mean something for women's health?

We're trying to drive less this month, and, boy, are we ever bad at that.

Our population is going to grow by 3 billion people in the next century. But if we play our cards right, none of them will go hungry.

According to a new law that's likely to pass this week, the Yellow Pages would have to confirm you want a book before giving you one.

For our second GOOD Challenge, we're going to try giving up processed foods for a month. But what are "processed foods" anyway?