TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES — You don’t have to go far to find water leaks in this southern New Mexico city. Read moreFeeling the water pressure: New Mexico's approach to aging water systems can lead to leaks, shortages
Upon first glance, it looked almost like a small pool of water. But the liquid puddle in the heart of New Mexico’s most prolific oil basin was indeed fossil fuel that overflowed from a long-since abandoned tankard.
For years, more than 200 residents and workers in an enclave of Southeast Albuquerque potentially have been breathing contaminated air.
The Bernalillo County Commission appointed Thomas De Pree to the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Air Quality Control Board Tuesday with a 3-1 vote, filling a vacant seat on the seven-member board.
Two years after the federal government passed the Inflation Reduction Act, New Mexico is reaping from its benefits.
It’s well known that New Mexico once was ground zero for nuclear weapons testing, leaving behind toxic radioactive waste. But has the federal government been effectively cleaning up that waste in northern New Mexico?
While state and federal governments for years have touted renewable energy tax credits, the green resources largely remained inaccessible for people who couldn’t afford the high upfront costs.
CORRALES — A towering crane hoisted a load of hefty parts off a truck’s flatbed trailer and maneuvered it to a landing near a fenced-in jumble of mechanical equipment on the west bank of the Rio Grande.
The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish says a female moose has been hanging around the Taos area.
New Mexico will see a drop in temperatures throughout the week as rain showers sweep across the state.
U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland focused on her family’s generational ties to New Mexico and the nation’s climate future in a prime-time speech Thursday at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
SANTA FE — New Mexico’s unprecedented, oil-powered revenue growth is slowing, but state lawmakers will still have a mountain of money available to spend in the coming year.
The New Mexico Environment Department is looking for workers.