Canada
The Narwhal
- ‘Afraid of the water’? Life in a city that dumps billions of litres of raw sewage into lakes and rivers
10 billion litres of sewage are dumped into Winnipeg’s lakes and rivers each year. Some avoid touching river water altogether — but others say the untreated sewage is not as bad as it sounds
- Court halts tailings increase as First Nation challenges B.C.’s decision to greenlight it
B.C. Supreme Court sides with Xatśūll First Nation, pausing Mount Polley mine’s waste expansion
- Why Ontario is experiencing more floods — and what we can do about it
How can we limit damage from disasters like the 2024 Toronto floods? In this explainer video, we highlight some pretty useful solutions to our water problems
Rabble
The Walrus
- How Do You Know When Your Kids Are Too Old for Cuddles?
Motherhood is remembering the best days, the loudest giggles, the tightest hugs The post How Do You Know When Your Kids Are Too Old for Cuddles? first appeared on The Walrus.
- Weekly Quiz: Shifts at Shopify, Future-Oriented Floristry, and the Pressure on Paramedics
How closely have you been reading our online stories this week? Take The Walrus Weekly Quiz to find out—released every Saturday. The post Weekly Quiz: Shifts at Shopify, Future-Oriented Floristry, and the Pressure on Paramedics first appeared on The Walrus.
- Do Big Lawsuits against Big Companies Really Fix Anything?
When it comes to regulating corporate behaviour, legal action offers an alternative to legislation The post Do Big Lawsuits against Big Companies Really Fix Anything? first appeared on The Walrus.
- The Economy Is One Tariff Away from a Supply-Chain Meltdown
The cost of Trump’s trade war on cars is adding up The post The Economy Is One Tariff Away from a Supply-Chain Meltdown first appeared on The Walrus.
- I Regret My Tesla
I wanted to be good. Then the car company fell from grace The post I Regret My Tesla first appeared on The Walrus.
Our Times
Hakai Magazine
- So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
We started Hakai Magazine over 10 years ago because the ocean and its coastlines needed a voice. No other outlet was exclusively covering issues at the interface of sea and land—or of the marine world in general. After all these ...
Alternatives Journal
- WHERE THE WILDWAYS ARE
With apologies to Max, the central character in Maurice Sendak’s 1963 classic Where The Wild Things Are, and his arduous journey “in and out of weeks and through a day and into the night of his very own room”, Alice the Moose puts his to shame. Alice left her home park in
- The Journey to 2071: An Earth Odyssey
Dear Reader, We are excited to present to you our third issue from 2021, “The Journey to 2071: An Earth Odyssey”. In this issue, we aim to mentally enter the year 2071, with the assumption that we made it to that point, and tell stories from our journeys to getting
- They Call It Worm. They Call It Lame. That’s Not Its Name.
“Move over murder hornets. A new insect has people bugging out,” begins a segment for evening news viewers across the country. The story continues, but most can’t help but pause and question what just came out of their television speakers. Murder hornets? Murder hornet has become the popularized name for