A Sinkhole Is Threatening to Consume Ecuador’s Main Source of Power – P. Millard / S. Kueffner
If a hydroplant responsible for 30% of the nation’s electricity went offline, it would compound an energy crisis already roiling
If a hydroplant responsible for 30% of the nation’s electricity went offline, it would compound an energy crisis already roiling
A look at why Argentina’s libertarian president has outperformed expectations at the one-year mark, with several challenges ahead. Javier Milei
President Bashar al-Assad, who wielded fear and force over Syria for more than two decades, fled the country under the
By The planned restart of Three Mile Island is a step forward for nuclear power, but the U.S. needs to
By The Economist In the end the pressure grew too great. On September 7th, six weeks after he won Venezuela’s presidential
Even as a sweeping proposal to elect nearly 7,000 judges inches toward law, some Mexicans have protested it. Others welcomed
By Jon Lee Arserson Over the past several days, as videos have streamed out of Venezuela showing angry crowds toppling
After another dubious election victory, Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, appears firmly in power. The only real potential threat, history shows,
By Yarimar Bonilla This month a massive outage left over 350,000 customers in San Juan, P.R., without power, including my
By Michael Robbins, Amaney A. Jamal, and Mark Tessler October 7, 2023, was a watershed moment not just for Israel
BY Emiliano Rodríguez Mega Why does this election matter? Mexico’s vote on June 2 will be a landmark election in
By Brian Winter In the course of my life I have probably spent, without exaggeration, at least 1,000 hours in
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