Agriculture Climate Change Coastlines Conservation Debate Economics Energy Health Infrastructure Language Native Nations Pollution Public Lands Water Wildfire You & Us ...
& the West

Published since 2016,  ‘& the West’ offers reporting, research, interviews, and analysis on the environmental future of California and western North America. It is produced by the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University.  More about us »

Latest Stories

Coastlines & the West

Pollution & the West

Energy & the West | Up Close

& the Best

What we’re reading elsewhere.

What we’re reading: October 15, 2024

By Elly MacKay

Dengue fever outbreaks in Los Angeles, the environmental and emotional impacts of bitcoin mining, blowouts from orphaned wells, how Mexico City avoided running out of water, native climbers plan ascent of the mountain they call Mount Tahoma, and more environmental news from around the West.

The Biden administration approves a massive Pacific Ocean marine sanctuary. The 4,543-acre Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary on the central California coast includes a large tract of water but carves out space for possible development of ocean wind farms. E&E NEWS

Four cases of Dengue fever arise in Los Angeles County, all in patients without a history of travel to high-risk areas. The mosquitos that carry Dengue, aedes mosquitoes, are invasive in southern California, but are increasingly common as temperatures rise. USC ANNENBERG MEDIA

Residents of Granbury, Texas are fighting Bitcoin mining with a noise pollution lawsuit. They live near Marathon Digital facility, where computers spend all day generating codes in order to unlock and sell bitcoins on the cryptocurrency market– each of which are currently worth $62,500. These mines require electricity – fueled by natural gas in this case – and a way to keep cool in the Texas heat. The lawsuit attacks the fans used to cool the 20,000 computers, whose noise, they claim, has caused vertigo, hearing loss, migraines, fatigue, anxiety, and tinnitus. INSIDE CLIMATE NEWS

Muckleshoot tribal member Rachel Heaton plans to lead a team of all-native climbers to the top of Tahoma, the mountain dubbed Mount Rainier in 1872. No one on the team has mountaineering experience, yet they are determined to bring native visibility into the history of Tahoma summits. REI Co-Op/ UNCOMMON PATH

We know how dams block the movement of fish, but what about the movement of sediments? Globally, 18 cubic miles of sediments are trapped behind dams, reducing the storage capacity of these dams while altering riverbed ecosystems downstream. The imbalance of sediments will affect the Klamath River, the San Francisco Bay, the Amazon River Delta, and the Nile River Delta, among others. ENSIA

How close Mexico City came to running out of water this year, and the lucky rain and water reserves that saved it. BLOOMBERG

Oregon county adds a major gas provider to its $51.5 billion lawsuit against fossil fuel firms for allegedly sowing climate doubt and for their role in the region’s deadly 2021 heat wave. ASSOCIATED PRESS

See more Stories»

Stories by Topic

What we’re reading, Dec. 6, 2021

Disappearing snowpack in the West. Is the end of western mountain snowpacks in sight? San Francisco Chronicle Washington Post

Disappearing water in the West. Does groundwater have a future in California, or is its depletion inevitable? Stanford Earth Matters

Disappearing water, Part II. Water agencies serving 27 million Californians are on their own next year, getting nothing from state water projects. Los Angeles Times

Disappearing water, Part III. Small farmers in the Central Valley wonder: where is Kings County water going? SJV Water

Oregon’s proposed Jordan Cove liquified natural gas project abandoned. It was designed to include a liquified natural gas terminal and a 229-mile natural gas pipeline and send liquified natural gas to Asian markets. Oregon Public Broadcasting

Interior Secretary Haaland works to eliminate racist place names, like those using the word “squaw.” How names like “Chinaman Gulch” affected one Asian American. Grist KSUT

See more Stories»

Newsletter

Sign up to keep up with our latest articles, sent no more than once per week (see an example).

Your information will not be shared.


Staff and Contributors

Felicity Barringer

Lead writer

A national environmental correspondent during the last decade of her 28 years at The New York Times, Felicity provided an in-depth look at the adoption of AB 32, California’s landmark climate-change bill after covering state’s carbon reduction policies. MORE »

Geoff McGhee

Associate editor

Geoff McGhee specializes in interactive data visualization and multimedia storytelling. He is a veteran of the multimedia and infographics staffs at The New York Times, Le Monde and ABCNews.com. MORE »

Xavier Martinez

Xavier Martinez

Editorial Assistant

Xavier graduated from Stanford in 2023 with a degree in economics and is currently a master’s student in Stanford’s journalism program. He has written about the high phone call costs faced by U.S. inmates, temporary Mexican workers’ interactions with the labor market and the efficacy of government healthcare assistance programs. A lifelong lover of charts and maps, he enjoys combining data journalism with narrative-style reporting. 

‘& the West’ is published by the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University, which is dedicated to research, teaching, and journalism about the past, present, and future of the North American West.

Bruce E. Cain

Faculty Director

Kate Gibson

Associate Director

west.stanford.edu

Past Contributors

Rani Chor
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2024
rchor@stanford.edu
@chorrani
 
Syler Peralta-Ramos
Editorial Assistant, Spring 2022
sylerpr@stanford.edu
 
Anna McNulty
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2021
annam23@stanford.edu
 
Melina Walling
Editorial Assistant, Spring 2021
mwalling@stanford.edu
 
Benek Robertson
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2021
benekrobertson@stanford.edu
 
Maya Burke
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2020
mburke3@stanford.edu
 
Kate Selig
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2020

 
Francisco L. Nodarse
Editorial Assistant, Summer 2020
fnodarse@stanford.edu
 
Devon R. Burger
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2020
devonburger@stanford.edu
 
Madison Pobis
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2019
mpobis@stanford.edu
 
Sierra Garcia
Editorial Assistant, Summer 2019

 
Danielle Nguyen
Editorial Assistant, Spring 2019
Carolyn P. Rice
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2019
carolyn4@stanford.edu
 
Rebecca Nelson
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2018
rnelson3@stanford.edu
 
Emily Wilder
Editorial Assistant, Summer 2018
ewilder2@stanford.edu
 
Alessandro Hall
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2018
ahall2@stanford.edu 
Josh Lappen
Editorial Assistant, Fall 2017
@jlappen1
jlappen@stanford.edu 
Natasha Mmonatau
Editorial Assistant, Spring 2017
@NatashaMmonatau
 
Alan Propp
Editorial Assistant, Winter 2017
@alanpropp
css.php