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Explore the wild and scenic mountainscape in which Earthjustice took its first steps.
Chris Jordan-Bloch / Earthjustice

Video

Little Blue: A Broken Promise

A small community was promised a recreational dream. Instead, they got a toxic nightmare. In this video, watch their battle against coal ash, a toxic waste that is polluting hundreds of similar communities across America.

Coral and Parrotfish: A Love Story

Go diving, in a video with attorney Andrea Treece as she explores the role parrotfish play in protecting the Caribbean coral reef ecosystem.

Slideshows

Images from the Crown of the Continent

The Crown of the Continent ecosystem serves as a critical refuge for grizzly bears, wolverines, and more. Conservationist Gene Sentz shares his photos of the ten-million acre expanse of land whose untouched wilderness harkens back to the days of Lewis & Clark.

Roadless Area Photo Slideshow

The nearly 60 million acres of wild national forest lands protected under the 2001 Roadless Rule provide refuge for many species. Clearly, the best future for these lands and the people who enjoy them is to leave them as they are.

Audio

Teleconference: Fracking And Community Control

On June 20, 2014, in advance of a decision from New York’s high court over a pair of zoning-based oil and gas development bans, experts from New York, Colorado, California, Pennsylvania and Texas hosted a teleconference on the growing trend of community control over fracking.

Special Features

A Climate Solution Within Reach: Coming Clean: The State of U.S. Renewable Energy

The Clean Power Plan sets different goals for each state to reduce its carbon emissions by 2030. As one pathway to meet those goals, the EPA suggests a renewable energy target for each state. However, many of the states are already on track to meet or even exceed those renewable aims. See how your state stacks up on the road to a cleaner energy future.

La Sequía en California

¿Quién recibe la agua y quién se quedará sin ella? La sequía actual que ya ha alcanzado niveles históricos ha sacado a relucir la antigua contienda sobre quién tiene derecho a reclamar el agua en un estado sediento. Mientras la industria agrícola (que en la actualidad consume el 80% del racionamiento de agua de California) ejerce cada vez más presión para reclamar que se envíe más agua a sus campos localizados en las áridas regiones del Valle Central, a quién se perjudica y se deja sin agua?