Current:Home > StocksInsideClimate News Celebrates 10 Years of Hard-Hitting Journalism -Wealth Evolution Experts
InsideClimate News Celebrates 10 Years of Hard-Hitting Journalism
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:52:36
InsideClimate News is celebrating 10 years of award-winning journalism this month and its growth from a two-person blog into one of the largest environmental newsrooms in the country. The team has already won one Pulitzer Prize and was a finalist for the prize three years later for its investigation into what Exxon knew about climate change and what the company did with its knowledge.
At an anniversary celebration and benefit on Nov. 1 at Time, Inc. in New York, the staff and supporters looked back on a decade of investigations and climate news coverage.
The online news organization launched in 2007 to help fill the gap in climate and energy watchdog reporting, which had been missing in the mainstream press. It has grown into a 15-member newsroom, staffed with some of the most experienced environmental journalists in the country.
“Our non-profit newsroom is independent and unflinching in its coverage of the climate story,” ICN Founder and Publisher David Sassoon said. “Our focus on accountability has yielded work of consistent impact, and we’re making plans to meet the growing need for our reporting over the next 10 years.”
ICN has won several of the major awards in journalism, including the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for its examination of flawed regulations overseeing the nation’s oil pipelines and the environmental dangers from tar sands oil. In 2016, it was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for its investigation into what Exxon knew about climate science from its own cutting-edge research in the 1970s and `80s and how the company came to manufacture doubt about the scientific consensus its own scientists had confirmed. The Exxon investigation also won the John B. Oakes Award for Distinguished Environmental Journalism and awards from the White House Correspondents’ Association and the National Press Foundation, among others.
In addition to its signature investigative work, ICN publishes dozens of stories a month from reporters covering clean energy, the Arctic, environmental justice, politics, science, agriculture and coastal issues, among other issues.
It produces deep-dive explanatory and watchdog series, including the ongoing Choke Hold project, which examines the fossil fuel industry’s fight to protect its power and profits, and Finding Middle Ground, a unique storytelling series that seeks to find the common ground of concern over climate change among Americans, beyond the partisan divide and echo chambers. ICN also collaborates with media around the country to share its investigative work with a broad audience.
“Climate change is forcing a transformation of the global energy economy and is already touching every nation and every human life,” said Stacy Feldman, ICN’s executive editor. “It is the story of this century, and we are going to be following it wherever it takes us.”
More than 200 people attended the Nov. 1 gala. Norm Pearlstine, an ICN Board member and former vice chair of Time, Inc., moderated “Climate Journalism in an era of Denial and Deluge” with Jane Mayer, a staff writer for the New Yorker and author of “Dark Money,” ICN senior correspondent Neela Banerjee, and Meera Subramanian, author of ICN’s Finding Middle Ground series.
The video above, shown at the gala, describes the first 10 years of ICN, the organization’s impact, and its plan for the next 10 years as it seeks to build a permanent home for environmental journalism.
veryGood! (75)
Related
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- The wide open possibility of the high seas
- Nations Most Impacted by Global Warming Kept Out of Key Climate Meetings in Glasgow
- Even Kate Middleton Is Tapping Into the Barbiecore Trend
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Binance lawsuit, bank failures and oil drilling
- Deadly ‘Smoke Waves’ From Wildfires Set to Soar
- Google's 'Ghost Workers' are demanding to be seen by the tech giant
- Trump's 'stop
- Actor Julian Sands Found Dead on California's Mt. Baldy 6 Months After Going Missing
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- AMC ditching plan to charge more for best movie theater seats
- Why Nepo Babies Are Bad For Business (Sorry, 'Succession')
- SEC charges Digital World SPAC, formed to buy Truth Social, with misleading investors
- Small twin
- Inside Clean Energy: From Sweden, a Potential Breakthrough for Clean Steel
- Warming Trends: Lithium Mining’s Threat to Flamingos in the Andes, Plus Resilience in Bangladesh, Barcelona’s Innovation and Global Storm Warnings
- Women now dominate the book business. Why there and not other creative industries?
Recommendation
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
Las Vegas police seize computers, photographs from home in connection with Tupac's murder
One Last Climate Warning in New IPCC Report: ‘Now or Never’
Watch Oppenheimer discuss use of the atomic bomb in 1965 interview: It was not undertaken lightly
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
The president of the United Auto Workers union has been ousted in an election
Former NYPD Commissioner Bernard Kerik in discussions to meet with special counsel
Labor's labors lost? A year after stunning victory at Amazon, unions are stalled