Ensia

Ensia is a magazine showcasing environmental solutions in action. It's based at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis.

coal

Here’s what you need to know about carbon pricing

Climate Change

As the world weighs strategies for keeping climate change in check, more and more countries, communities and businesses are embedding the cost of carbon into the goods and services that produce it.

a solar panel farm in China

Energy and food together: Under solar panels, crops thrive

Environment
Coatepeque Lake is seen from a road in the town of El Congo, El Salvador, Sept. 6, 2017. The color of the water in the Coatepeque lake has changed due to the proliferation of Cyanobacteria and non-identified minerals.

Around the world, the environment is finally getting its day in court

Environment
Fish in a tank

After decades of work, Americans may soon be eating genetically engineered salmon

Food
Grass in soil

Figuring out why certain soils keep plant parasites at bay could be a boon for agriculture around the globe

Environment
Sammy Kang’ete, an intern from Kenya

Small farmers from around the world learn how they can grow far more food

Development

In the hills north of San Francisco, a new form of farming is taking root. It’s called biointensive farming, and it has the potential to give small farmers a much bigger impact on the global food supply.In the hills north of San Francisco, a new form of farming is taking root. It’s called biointensive farming, and it has the potential to give small farmers a much bigger impact on the global food supply.

Xiaolangdi Reservoir

Paying more attention to the weather could help stretch our existing water supplies

Environment

New York City drew the reservoir down to an unprecedented level last winter — but only because forecasting told city official that it would soon be able to refill with an unprecedented amount of snowmelt.

A European honey bee carries pollen back to its hive.

With pollinators in decline around the world, conservationists turn to traditional farmers for answers

Environment

The crisis over the death of pollinators is not unique to the US. But around the world, old techniques are being revived to save bees, butterflies and other pollinators on the very of collapse.

Alfalfa fields

Scientists think GMO crops may help us deal with climate change

Environment

Roger Deal is trying to figure out how plants remember drought. An assistant professor of biochemistry and genetics at Emory University, Deal says most plants have a kind of memory for stress. When experiencing water shortage, for example, plants close the holes in their leaves, called stomata, to reduce water loss from their tissues. This […]

Fort Myers Beach

As apps and online tools connect users with the outdoors, we walk a fine line between enhancing and degrading nature

Environment

Smartphone apps are becoming increasingly indispensable when we interact with nature. Websites too. But what’s all that technology doing to our relationship with nature?