A still from the new film Godzilla: King of the Monsters, which opens this week. In a time of environmental destruction, Godzilla is the perfect monster to represent the consequences of humanity’s actions.
Warner Bros/IMDB
Popular monsters often reflect humanity’s greatest fears. Godzilla, with its destructive rampages, is the foremost monster for our age of environmental threat.
Sydney’s airport is one of the most vulnerable in Australia to sea level rise.
Shutterstock
Why radical changes to society are needed if we are to escape environmental disaster.
Giving food that would otherwise go to landfill to hungry people does little to ensure the well-being of Canadians who are food insecure.
(Shutterstock)
The Liberal government’s contradictory stances on the environment and economic development may result in Andrew Scheer’s Conservatives winning in October.
A mixture of grains and crops keeps the doctor away.
Shutterstock
Combining and fermenting readily available indigenous African crops can help counter malnutrition on the continent.
The finch management plan and the groundwater management plan have already been approved by the federal government – but not by the state government.
Mick Tsikas/AAP
The Western Australian coral reefs may not be as well known as the Great Barrier Reef, but they’re just as large and diverse. And they too have been devastated by cyclones and coral bleaching.
Coffee bushes in a shade-grown plantation in the Andes, Ecuador.
Morley Read/Shutterstock
Meine van Noordwijk, Center for International Forestry Research – World Agroforestry (CIFOR-ICRAF)
Because the interactions between trees, soils, crops and livestock can be positive or negative, their relationship must be balanced and understood.
A small boat in the Illulissat Icefjord is dwarfed by the icebergs that have calved from the floating tongue of Greenland’s largest glacier, Jacobshavn Isbrae.
Michael Bamber
Many people think climate change caused Classic Maya civilization to collapse abruptly around 900 A.D. An archaeologist says that view is too simplistic and misses the bigger point.
The perceived authority is important in helping us determine how trustworthy a graphic is.
Diego Gutiérrez via WWF