Waste City
Hold your nose and open your wallet: Why the business of garbage is good for Houston.
Hold your nose and open your wallet: Why the business of garbage is good for Houston.
By Robert Bryce
A massive buildup for Texas Tech University’s Vietnam archive.
By Robert Bryce
The Barton Springs salamander goes to court.
By Robert Bryce
Why the citizens of Alvin are down in the dumps over garbage.
By Robert Bryce
By pooh-poohing sentimentality and focusing on profits, Houston funeral home mogul Robert Waltrip is making a killing.
By Robert Bryce
The Federal Express of the cattle business.
By Robert Bryce
The B-1 bomber costs too much and does too little—so who wants to keep it alive? The people of Abilene, whose economy could take a direct hit if the Pentagon pulls the trigger.
By Robert Bryce
Brown and Root goes to Bosnia for the Pentagon—and cleans up.
By Robert Bryce
Pollution from Mexico is already plaguing West Texas—and it's only going to get worse.
By Robert Bryce
A Hill Country ecobusiness discovers that green is also the color of money.
By Robert Bryce
Candelaria’s only well supplied free water to all until the EPA weighed in.
By Robert Bryce
Texans used to litter like crazy; now the state’s get-tough-on-trash policy is cleaning up their act.
By Robert Bryce
Pipeline leaks, unplugged wells, toxic drilling materials, and a virtually unregulated oil industry are leaving a legacy of polluted groundwater.
By Robert Bryce
After rescuing hundreds of birds from horrible deaths, a Midland woman has finally gained an ally in her war on open oil pits.
By Robert Bryce