Donate

Ray Newby

The Houston Ship Channel stretches 52 miles from the Gulf of Mexico to the city of Houston. Sea levels have risen 2.2 feet over the last century at Galveston, the main barrier island protecting the Ship Channel from a big storm.

The ‘Texas miracle’ is fueling huge economic growth — and the climate change that may end it

December 3, 2014Environment

Texas is the biggest climate polluter in the U.S. It’s also is also extremely vulnerable to some of the impacts of climate change. But the state’s most prominent politicians say they don’t believe that climate change is real. It all adds up to a big problem for Texas and the rest of us.

Latest Headlines

Trump rules out talks absent Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender’ as Israel strikes Lebanon
Descriptions of struggle at an art exhibition in Prague
As climate change melts permafrost, landslides are becoming more dangerous 
Amid surge in exports to US, Argentina aims to reclaim the glory days of its beef
Cuba’s private businesses navigate a narrow opening
The Americas’ last prison island has become a tourist destination
International adoptions face hurdles, leaving little hope for many orphaned children
Clashes between Afghanistan and Pakistan raise concerns about ‘open war’
Spain debates using the sun for olive harvests or solar park projects
Trump says Iran war could last weeks, Iran strikes US bases across region
More stories

The World is a public radio program that crosses borders and time zones to bring home the stories that matter.

Produced by

Thanks to our sponsor

  1. Progressive Insurance logo

Major funding provided by

  1. Carnegie Corporation of New York

  1. About
  2. Contact
  3. Donate
  4. Meet the Team
  5. Privacy
  6. Terms of use

©2026 The World from PRX

PRX is a 501(c)(3) organization recognized by the IRS: #263347402.