News

Environmentalists demand action as Sumter’s wastewater plant contaminates the Pocotaligo River with toxic forever chemicals, threatening public health.
High levels of forever chemicals in SC rivers and lakes raises the risk of cancer, other health problems in humans. The pollution comes from products we use.
The agency released its latest Toxics Release Inventory analysis, showing self-reported chemical releases rose 2 percent between 2022 and 2023. The amount of pollutants released into the environment ...
Forever chemicals known as PFAS have turned up in an unexpected place: beer. Researchers tested 23 different beers from ...
PORTLAND, Ore. — Donald Trump’s forces have tear gassed a public school into submission. Or at least into fleeing its longtime campus. By day, protester signs, directed at passersby, carry messages ...
Chemical analyses of an ancient river channel’s sediment at a Roman site in northern England have challenged a long-held view ...
Fossil fuel companies are working hard to push chemical recycling because plastic is one of Big Oil’s last lifelines.
The global use of face masks surged during the COVID-19 pandemic, but many have since been discarded as waste, contributing ...