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Front Range gas prices are lower than a year ago despite requirement for “reformulated gas” that reduces ozone-causing emissions.
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Boulder residents in November might vote on a controversial proposal to decommission Boulder Municipal Airport and use the land for housing.
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New analysis on the top eight U.S. and European oil and gas producers documents how their climate pledges and plans fail to align with international agreements to phase out fossil fuels and to limit global temperature rise to 1.5ºC.
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Citing high costs and a shortage of skilled press operators, Prairie Mountain Media will close its 15-year-old, 60,000-square-foot printing plant in Berthoud and move the production of newspapers and other publications to The Denver Post’s production facility.
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Colorado scientists trying to control the spread of wheat stem sawfly have just had a major breakthrough.
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A coalition of Boulder groups is making a play for the city to host the Sundance Film Festival for a decade starting in 2027.
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Moffat County and the City of Craig want state utility regulators to require the company that owns a local coal-fired power plant to provide millions of dollars in federal aid. Tri-State plans to shut down the plant's first unit due to financial setbacks at the end of this year and eventually retire the two others by 2028. The closures could have a huge impact on the region’s tax base and economy. The Colorado Sun editor David Krause joined ʹַ's Michael Lyle, Jr. to get more on this story.
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Across the U.S., thieves have been targeting electric-vehicle charging stations, intent on stealing the cables, which contain copper wiring.
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Almost three years ago, an unlikely relationship formed between the declining coal town of Kemmerer and one of the richest people in the world: Bill Gates. That’s because his nuclear company, TerraPower, announced it’d chosen Kemmerer for a “first of its kind” power plant. It promised to pump life back into the economy. But unless you’re deeply embedded in the energy world, it mostly just felt like a lot of talk to residents – until this month, when the project broke ground.
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More Coloradans are filing for bankruptcy and new data show the pace of filings is increasing. Chris Wood, editor and publisher of BizWest, joined ʹַ to discuss what the numbers mean — and what they don't.