Dharna Noor
About Dharna Noor
Dharna Noor is a fossil fuels and climate reporter at Guardian US.
How U.S. states are leading the climate fight — despite Trump’s rollbacks
Officials are making clean-energy moves in California, New York and beyond, and Republican states will be integral too
How Trump’s day one orders reveal a White House for big oil
From LNG to drilling in Alaska, here’s everything you need to know about Trump’s energy and climate executive orders
Fossil fuel bosses get ‘red carpet’ at Cop29 despite concerns over influence
Revealed: more than 100 executives given special guest badges as activists challenge role of oil and gas firms at talks
New York prosecutors consider criminal charges against Big Oil for causing climate disasters
Oil majors’ conduct can constitute reckless endangerment due to fossil fuels’ effect on global heating, advocates claim
Shell quietly backs away from pledge to increase ‘advanced recycling’ of plastics
Energy giant promised to turn 1m tonnes of plastic waste into oil each year, but now says goal is unfeasible
Youth activists win ‘unprecedented’ climate settlement in Hawaii
State’s transport department given a 2045 deadline to fully decarbonize and achieve zero emissions under agreement
‘No evidence’ Big Oil is serious on climate, report finds
Oil Change International graded the plans of eight major oil corporations and found all of them are failing to meet their much-publicized climate pledges — with American firms receiving "worst of the worst" reviews.
Trump's new ‘deal’ could save Big Oil $110 billion in taxes
Former president Donald Trump's ask for $1 billion in campaign donations from Big Oil seems a small price to pay to preserve the tax loopholes that his presidential opponent, Joe Biden, has indicated he intends to close.
Fury after Exxon boss says public to blame for climate failures
Darren Woods tells Fortune that consumers are not willing to pay for a clean energy transition, prompting backlash from climate experts.
PR juggernaut Edelman worked with Koch network, despite climate promises
The move by the world’s largest public relations company, uncovered by tax records, alarms climate advocates.