Brian Castner
Contributor
How to Rescue a Cruise Ship in the Northwest Passage
There is not much of a script for such a mass evacuation.
The $20 Billion Arctic Pipeline That Will Haunt Canada Forever
It’s considered the “greatest construction project” ever. Four decades on, low oil and gas prices may finally put Canada’s plans for the Mackenzie Gas Project to rest.
I Canoed to the Arctic Ocean, and What Did I Find? A Balmy Beach
Water that’s 72 degrees Fahrenheit would be pleasant just about anywhere, let alone in the Arctic Circle.
The People Making Solar Power Where the Sun Doesn't Set
The tricky balance of diesel and renewable energy in the far north.
The Best Place in the World to Set a Forest Fire
“Up here we can go to the 95th percentile, the worst conditions.”
Silt Built This Town—And Melting Ice Will Eventually Destroy It
The island upon which Fort Simpson rests has always been in flux, but climate change has tweaked the balanced system.
Everything I Brought With Me on a 1,200-Mile River Canoe Trip
It took five months to plan, purchase, test, re-purchase, and pack the gear I'd need to paddle the entire length of the Mackenzie River to report on climate change.
Why I Canoed 1,200 Miles to the Arctic Circle to Report on Climate Change
How did you spend your summer?
The Problem With Biometrics at War
An excerpt from "All the Ways We Kill and Die," the forthcoming book by bestselling author Brian Castner.
One Degree of Separation in the Forever War
The tale of Reese and Yuri Hines, two brothers in two wars, suggests the Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon game needs a new name in the US military.
The Changing Face of Battlefield Medicine
Even as technology like drones and Stuxnet viruses have made war more remote and data-driven, there’s a bigger expectation than ever for battlefield medical response.
Hearts, Minds, and Ebola: The US Army Drops In On Liberia
VICE News spent time with members of the 101st Airborne as they went about the chaotic task of helping to end Liberia's current fight against Ebola.