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'Discomfort May Increase’: Asia’s Heat Wave Scorches Hundreds of Millions:

 
'Discomfort May Increase’: Asia’s Heat Wave Scorches Hundreds of Millions - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 22 · April is typically hot in South and Southeast Asia, but temperatures this month have been unusually high.
Saif Hasnat reported from Dhaka, Bangladesh, and Mike Ives from Seoul.
Hundreds of millions of people in South and Southeast Asia were suffering on Monday from a punishing heat wave that has forced schools to close, disrupted agriculture, and raised the risk of heat strokes and other health complications.
The weather across the region in April is generally hot, and comes before Asia’s annual summer monsoon, which dumps rain on parched soil. But this April’s temperatures have so far been unusually high.
In Bangladesh, where schools and universities are ...
| By Saif Hasnat and Mike Ives    Read more ...
 

'So hot you can't breathe': Extreme heat hits the Philippines:

 
'So hot you can't breathe': Extreme heat hits the Philippines - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Extreme heat scorched the Philippines on Wednesday, forcing schools in some areas to suspend in-person classes and prompting warnings for people to limit the amount of time spent outdoors.
The months of March, April and May are typically the hottest and driest in the archipelago nation, but conditions this year have been exacerbated by the El Niño weather phenomenon.
"It's so hot you can't breathe," said Erlin Tumaron, 60, who works at a seaside resort in Cavite province, south of Manila, where the heat index reached 47 degrees Celsius (117 degrees Fahrenheit) on Tuesday.
"It's surprising our pools are still empty. You would expect people to come and take a swim, ...
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'Sunny day flooding' increases fecal contamination of coastal waters:

 
'Sunny day flooding' increases fecal contamination of coastal waters - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · "Historically we see the highest levels of fecal bacteria contamination in coastal waterways after it rains, because the rain washes contaminants into the waterways," says Natalie Nelson, corresponding author of a paper on the study and an associate professor of biological and agricultural engineering at North Carolina State University.
"Due to sea level rise, we're seeing an increase in flooding in coastal areas at high tide—even when there isn't any rainfall. We wanted to see whether sunny day floods were associated with increases in fecal bacteria contamination in waterways."
For the study, researchers collected water samples every day for two summer months at ...
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'Sunny Day Flooding' Increases Fecal Contamination of Coastal Waters:

 
'Sunny Day Flooding' Increases Fecal Contamination of Coastal Waters - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A new study finds that "sunny day flooding," which occurs during high tides, increases the levels of fecal bacteria in coastal waters. While the elevated bacteria levels in the coastal waters tend to dissipate quickly, the findings suggest policymakers and public health officials should be aware of potential risks associated with tidal flooding.
"Historically we see the highest levels of fecal bacteria contamination in coastal waterways after it rains, because the rain washes contaminants into the waterways," says Natalie Nelson, corresponding author of a paper on the study and an associate professor of biological and agricultural engineering at North Carolina State ...
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100% wind and solar is coming!:

 
100% wind and solar is coming! - Just Have A Think
Apr 21 · 100% electrification from renewables like wind, solar, geothermal and hydro power, backed up with interconnections and energy storage is now just around the corner, and already the cheapest option available. But there are still bumps in the road. Can we overcome them in time?
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| By Just Have a Think    Read more ...
 

12 new books to honor Earth Day:

 
12 new books to honor Earth Day - Yale Climate Connections - Arts
Apr 12 · Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Yale Climate Connections
In the more than 50 years since it was first celebrated on April 22, 1970, Earth Day has become Earth Month, a longer time to take a wider view of our connections with nature.
For Earth Month 2024, Yale Climate Connections offers a bookshelf that links climate change with the broader goals of preserving biodiversity and cultivating healthy ecosystems.
The first book, “Gaia’s Web,” maps the broader terrain for the more focused books that follow. We need an “environmentalism [that] can combat climate change, restore biodiversity, cultivate empathy, ...
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44% of Latinos live in U.S. counties with a high flood risk:

 
44% of Latinos live in U.S. counties with a high flood risk - Yale Climate Connections - Policy
Apr 23 · Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Yale Climate Connections
In recent years, many U.S. residents have endured devastating floods.
But a new report from the nonprofits Headwaters Economics and Hispanic Access Foundation warns that Latino communities in the states are especially at risk.
The authors found that 44% of Latinos live in counties with a high flood risk, compared to just 35% of non-Latinos.
What’s more, Latino residents often face other challenges like language barriers and high housing costs, which can make floods even more harmful.
Hernandez: “A third of Latinos live in flood-prone ...
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A comprehensive monitoring and evaluation of disaster risk due to linkage of residual coal pillars and rock strata:

 
A comprehensive monitoring and evaluation of disaster risk due to linkage of residual coal pillars and rock strata - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · In extreme cases, such instability can trigger disasters like mine earthquakes and widespread collapse of goaf areas, potentially leading to casualties. Therefore, it is necessary to carry out monitoring and evaluation research on the risk of instability and disaster caused by the linkage of residual coal pillars and rock strata.
The challenge of instability linkage between residual coal pillars and rock strata is complex, as it not only involves the interaction between these pillars and strata but also engenders a cascade of linkage disasters. Present research efforts mostly lack a holistic assessment of the instability and disaster risks arising from the interaction between ...
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A flexible and efficient DC power converter for sustainable-energy microgrids:

 
A flexible and efficient DC power converter for sustainable-energy microgrids - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 19 · Electric power comes in two kinds, AC (alternating current) and DC (direct current). Famously, the question over which kind should be used for national power grids, the "Current War" of the late 19th century, got settled in favor of AC and most power plants today produce this kind. However, solar power, batteries and in particular those in electric vehicles, and computers all depend on DC, making lossy AC-to-DC conversion necessary.
An alternative to this is the establishment of DC microgrids that integrate various renewable DC energy sources and storage devices and deliver energy directly to data centers and other DC appliances. This eliminates the need for AC-to-DC ...
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A new electrochemical approach could reduce ocean acidity and remove carbon in the process:

 
A new electrochemical approach could reduce ocean acidity and remove carbon in the process - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Only 45 percent of carbon dioxide emissions remain in the atmosphere; the remainder is absorbed through two cycles: 1) the biological carbon cycle stores CO2 in plant matter and soils, and 2) the aqueous carbon cycle absorbs CO2 from the atmosphere into the oceans. Each of these cycles accounts for 25 percent and 30 percent of emitted CO2, respectively.
CO2 that dissolves in the oceans reacts to form chemicals that increase the acidity of the oceans. The dissolution of minerals from rocks along coastlines act to counterbalance this acidity, in a process called geological weathering, but the extreme increase in the rate and volume of CO2 emissions, especially over the last 60 ...
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Accelerated marine carbon cycling forced by tectonic degassing over the Miocene Climate Optimum:

 
Accelerated marine carbon cycling forced by tectonic degassing over the Miocene Climate Optimum - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · In a recent publication in Science Bulletin, a multidisciplinary team of authors from Tongji University, the Second Institute of Oceanography (Ministry of Natural Resources), the Institute of Earth Environment (Chinese Academy of Sciences), and Utrecht University reports for the first time that massive carbon inputs from volcanism and seafloor spreading have impacted the orbital phase relationships between carbon cycle and climate change.
Past changes in climate and carbon cycle have been documented by the stable isotope composition of benthic foraminiferal oxygen and carbon, as they are proxies for climate-cryosphere and carbon transfers between the ocean and other ...
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Aerogel-based phase change materials improve thermal management, reduce microwave emissions in electronic devices:

 
Aerogel-based phase change materials improve thermal management, reduce microwave emissions in electronic devices - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · Chinese scientists from Beijing Normal University have been working on building shielding for electronic devices using multifunctional composite phase change materials (PCMs) to address these performance issues.
PCMs are man-made materials built by combining different types of elements, allowing the creation of a new material with very specific purpose driven characteristics. In this case, the researchers are looking to improve thermal management, solar-thermal conversion and microwave absorption in the electronic devices.
Using engineering inspired by biological systems, they built a neural network-inspired aerogel that increases the efficiency of thermal management and ...
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AI weather forecasts can capture destructive path of major storms, new study shows:

 
AI weather forecasts can capture destructive path of major storms, new study shows - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Professor Andrew Charlton-Perez, who led the study, said, "AI is transforming weather forecasting before our eyes. Two years ago, modern machine learning techniques were rarely being applied to make weather forecasts. Now we have multiple models that can produce 10-day global forecasts in minutes.
"There is a great deal we can learn about AI weather forecasts by stress-testing them on extreme events like Storm Ciarán. We can identify their strengths and weaknesses and guide the development of even better AI forecasting technology to help protect people and property. This is an exciting and important time for weather forecasting."
Promise and pitfalls
To ...
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AI Weather Forecasts Captured Ciaran's Destructive Path:

 
AI Weather Forecasts Captured Ciaran's Destructive Path - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Artificial intelligence (AI) can quickly and accurately predict the path and intensity of major storms, a new study has demonstrated.
Professor Andrew Charlton-Perez, who led the study, said: "AI is transforming weather forecasting before our eyes. Two years ago, modern machine learning techniques were rarely being applied to make weather forecasts. Now we have multiple models that can produce 10-day global forecasts in minutes.
"There is a great deal we can learn about AI weather forecasts by stress-testing them on extreme events like Storm Ciarán. We can identify their strengths and weaknesses and guide the development of even better AI forecasting technology to ...
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Airborne interferometric radar altimeter shows potential for submesoscale sea surface height anomaly measurements:

 
Airborne interferometric radar altimeter shows potential for submesoscale sea surface height anomaly measurements - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Their study was published in Remote Sensing on April 12.
To date, humanity has not been able to observe two-dimensional (2D) oceanic processes at the 0.1–10 km submesoscale in the spatial domain using remote sensing. The SSHA signal at this scale is small and exceeds the resolution limits of the satellite altimeters used to date.
However, oceanic processes at this scale play a critical role in the study of ocean energy transfer, cascading, and dissipation, and are crucial for research on ocean energy balance, nutrient transport, and global climate change studies.
In this study, the researchers provided a detailed analysis of the SSHA and its wavenumber ...
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Amazon sold a chemical that led to 15 deaths: Who is responsible?:

 
Amazon sold a chemical that led to 15 deaths: Who is responsible? - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · In December 2020, 15-year-old Tyler Schmidt took a deadly chemical to a wooded area near his home in Camas, Clark County, Washington.
His body was found two days later. The chemical was determined to be his cause of death.
That year, four more individuals died the same way. In 2021 and 2022, 10 more died after ingesting the same chemical.
All 15 individuals purchased the chemical - a substance that can be used as a food preservative or in medical lab settings in a low purity form - from Amazon. It was sold there with 99% purity.
The families of those 15 people have sued Amazon in six separate cases since 2022 - including one filed last month - alleging the ...
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An Earth Day response from Al Sharpton:

 
An Earth Day response from Al Sharpton - Heated World
Apr 22 · Last week, HEATED reported that Al Sharpton used his annual National Action Network (NAN) civil rights convention to spread fossil fuel industry propaganda to Black communities.
HEATED reported that Sharpton personally introduced a panel titled “Affordable energy is a civil rights issue,” during which four paid gas industry spokespeople falsely told attendees that methane gas is a “clean” fuel; that a net-zero future is primarily being pushed by rich people; and that access to methane should be seen as a civil rights issue.Our article featured reaction from several climate justice activists - including former EPA environmental justice chief Mustafa Santiago Ali - who strongly ...
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An ultralow-concentration electrolyte for lithium-ion batteries:

 
An ultralow-concentration electrolyte for lithium-ion batteries - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · Lithium salts make batteries powerful but expensive. An ultralow-concentration electrolyte based on the lithium salt LiDFOB may be a more economical and more sustainable alternative. Cells using these electrolytes and conventional electrodes have been demonstrated to have high performance, as reported by a research team in the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition. In addition, the electrolyte could facilitate both production and recycling of the batteries.
Lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) provide power to smartphones and tablets, drive electric vehicles, and store electricity at power plants. The main components of most LIBs are lithium cobalt oxide (LCO) cathodes, ...
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Anticipating future risks of climate-driven wildfires in boreal forests:

 
Anticipating future risks of climate-driven wildfires in boreal forests - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 22 · Boreal forests often bring to mind snowy tundra, vast bogs, and diverse fauna such as reindeer or moose. However, it is increasingly home to a large number of wildfire occurrences. From the large fires in Sweden in 2014 and 2018, to the devastating fires in Siberia in 2021 and Canada in 2023, boreal forests are facing unprecedented levels of disturbance from wildfire events. These serve as a harbinger of what is to come in the upcoming decades, not just to the arctic north, but to forests around the globe.
In their study published in the journal Fire, Shelby Corning and her colleagues, all researchers in IIASA's Biodiversity and Natural Resources Program, utilized their ...
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Argentinian scientists condemn budget cuts ahead of university protest:

 
Argentinian scientists condemn budget cuts ahead of university protest - Climate Change News - Science
Apr 22 · Right-wing President Javier Milei has taken an axe to funding for education and scientific bodies, sparking fears for climate research
A medical student walks past a placard announcing the time left before the budget for the university runs out, at the entrance of the University of Buenos Aires Medical School, in the run-up to a national strike on April 23 against Argentina's President Javier Milei's policy of cuts in public education, in Buenos Aires, Argentina April 17, 2024 (Photo: REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian)
As a budget freeze for Argentina’s public universities amid soaring inflation leaves campuses unable to pay their electricity bills and climate science ...
| By Julian Reingold    Read more ...
 

At a glance - The difference between weather and climate:

 
At a glance - The difference between weather and climate - Skeptical Science
Apr 23 · On February 14, 2023 we announced our Rebuttal Update Project. This included an ask for feedback about the added "At a glance" section in the updated basic rebuttal versions. This weekly blog post series highlights this new section of one of the updated basic rebuttal versions and serves as a "bump" for our ask. This week features "The difference between weather and climate". More will follow in the upcoming weeks. Please follow the Further Reading link at the bottom to read the full rebuttal and to join the discussion in the comment thread there.
How do you go about weather forecasting by yourself? Study the computer models. With experience, you will become familiar with the ...
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At least 63 killed following four days of rainstorms in Pakistan:

 
At least 63 killed following four days of rainstorms in Pakistan - Los Angeles Times
Apr 17 · Lightning and heavy rains have led to 14 more deaths in Pakistan, officials said Wednesday, bringing the death toll from four days of extreme weather to at least 63, as the heaviest downpour in decades flooded villages on the country’s southwestern coast. Flash floods have also killed dozens of people in neighboring Afghanistan.
In Pakistan, most of the deaths were reported from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, in the country’s northwest. Collapsing buildings have killed 32 people, including 15 children and five women, said Khursheed Anwar, a spokesman for the Disaster Management Authority. Dozens more were also injured in the region, where 1,370 houses were damaged, Anwar ...
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Backyards, urban parks support bird diversity in unique ways:

 
Backyards, urban parks support bird diversity in unique ways - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 22 · The new findings are reported in the journal Landscape and Urban Planning.
"These cities are right next to each other, they're touching each other, but they have very different histories," said Henry Pollock, who led the research at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign with Illinois natural resources and environmental sciences professor Carena van Riper and former U. of I. evolution, ecology, and behavior professor Mark Hauber. Pollock is now the executive director of the Southern Plains Land Trust in Lamar, Colorado, and Hauber is the executive director of the Advanced Science Research Center at the City University of New York.
"We wanted to understand how ...
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Bacteria for climate-neutral chemicals of the future:

 
Bacteria for climate-neutral chemicals of the future - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · To produce various chemicals such as plastics, dyes or artificial flavors, the chemical industry currently relies heavily on fossil resources such as crude oil. "Globally, it consumes 500 million tons per year, or more than one million tons per day," says Julia Vorholt, Professor at the Institute of Microbiology at ETH Zurich.
"Since these chemical conversions are energy-intensive, the true CO2 footprint of the chemical industry is even six to 10 times larger, amounting to about five percent of total emissions globally." She and her team are looking for ways to reduce the chemical industry's dependence on fossil fuels.
Green methanol
Bacteria that feed on methanol, ...
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Beyond higher temperatures: Preparing for national security risks posed by climate change:

 
Beyond higher temperatures: Preparing for national security risks posed by climate change - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · But also at stake is the security of the United States and other nations. What if people become desperate for food? What if long-dormant microbes come to life due to thawing permafrost? What if water and electricity become scarce?
These are the sorts of questions that researchers at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) are asking as they take part in a series of national forums. Scientists have raised these questions and more at recent gatherings of the American Geophysical Union (AGU), the American Meteorological Society, and the U.S. military.
This week, as the world celebrates Earth Day, more than a dozen PNNL scientists and others ...
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Biden Earth Day Event Will Try to Reach Young Voters, a Crucial Bloc:

 
Biden Earth Day Event Will Try to Reach Young Voters, a Crucial Bloc - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 22 · At a national park in Virginia on Monday, the president will point to investments in clean energy and appear with future members of his American Climate Corps.
Reporting from Washington
President Biden will travel to a national park in Virginia on Monday, Earth Day, to spotlight his clean energy investments, with an eye on bolstering support among young voters disillusioned with their choices for the 2024 election.
Against the backdrop of the park, Prince William Forest, Mr. Biden will announce $7 billion in grants to fund solar power for hundreds of thousands of homes in primarily disadvantaged communities, according to the White House. He will be joined by future ...
| By Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Brad Plumer    Read more ...
 

Biden marks Earth Day with $7bn 'solar for all’ investment amid week of climate action:

 
Biden marks Earth Day with $7bn 'solar for all’ investment amid week of climate action - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · Funds will be targeted at disadvantaged areas to create 200,000 jobs, after last week’s oil and gas lease restrictions in Alaska
Joe Biden will mark Monday’s Earth Day by announcing a $7bn investment in solar energy projects nationwide, focusing on disadvantaged communities, and unveiling a week-long series of what the White House say will be “historic climate actions”.
The president is traveling to Virginia’s Prince William Forest Park to deliver a speech touting his environmental record, including measures to tackle the climate crisis and increase access to, and lower costs of, clean energy.
Today’s centerpiece is the announcement of $7bn in grants through the ...
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Breaking Down New Rules About 'Forever Chemicals’:

 
Breaking Down New Rules About 'Forever Chemicals’ - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 24 · Lisa Friedman, who covers climate change, discussed the fight to regulate toxic chemicals found in nearly half of America’s tap water.
Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together.
Cookware. Dental floss. Shampoo.
Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, known as PFAS, can be found in those items and hundreds of other household products. Nicknamed “forever chemicals” because they do not fully degrade, PFAS are resistant to heat, oil, grease and water. (One of the first uses of PFAS chemicals was as a nonstick agent in Teflon cookware in the 1940s.) But exposure to PFAS has been ...
| By Josh Ocampo    Read more ...
 

California has so much solar power it’s throwing it away:

 
California has so much solar power it’s throwing it away - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 22 · In sunny California, solar panels are everywhere. They sit in dry, desert landscapes in the Central Valley and are scattered over rooftops in Los Angeles’s urban center. By last count, the state had nearly 47 gigawatts of solar power installed - enough to power 13.9 million homes and provide over a quarter of the Golden State’s electricity.
But now, the state and its grid operator are grappling with a strange reality: There is so much solar on the grid that, on sunny spring days when there’s not as much demand, electricity prices go negative. Gigawatts of solar are “curtailed” - essentially, thrown away.
In response, California has cut back incentives for rooftop solar ...
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Chinese province of Guangdong hit by historic floods:

 
Chinese province of Guangdong hit by historic floods - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 22 · Heavy rains continued to batter southern China on Monday, forcing tens of thousands of people from their homes as rescuers raced to evacuate those trapped by flooding and locate at least 11 missing residents.
The historic levels of rain across Guangdong province have come earlier than the region’s usual flood season, between May and June, prompting concerns about the effects of climate change on the country.
Extreme weather events have become more frequent and severe in China, testing the top-down and increasingly centralized leadership under Xi Jinping that may be weakening local governments’ responses to such disasters.
The floods also threaten the country’s ...
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Climate Action for Earth Day:

 
Climate Action for Earth Day - Legal Planet
Apr 22 · Don’t believe what you’ve heard. There is one single thing you can give up that will help address climate change: voter apathy.
One-third of eligible voters - 80 million Americans - did not vote in the presidential election last time around. Why not? Because they just “weren’t registered” or they “weren’t interested in politics,” according to this Ipsos survey. It’s so much worse for local elections. Turnout in 10 of America’s largest cities was less than 15%, according to the Who Votes for Mayor project. In Dallas, just 6% voted in recent local elections.
Earth Day is a perfect day to register to vote and to make sure people in your life are registered - and fully aware ...
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Climate change expected to increase wildfire danger:

 
Climate change expected to increase wildfire danger - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · There is likely to be a significant increase in the danger of wildfires through the 21st century. Indeed, the expectation is that by 2100 the danger will be high even in regions where it is very low today. Those are the findings of a study by Julia Miller, a Ph.D. student in the SLF's Hydrology & Climate Impacts in Mountain Regions research group, published in Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences.
Forecasts show that the potential danger will continue to increase, but from 2040 onwards it will exceed the natural range of climate fluctuations and so will be attributed to climate change from then on. Taking the example of the Bavarian Alpine Foreland, this means that the ...
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Climate change is disrupting our sense of home:

 
Climate change is disrupting our sense of home - VOX -Environment
Apr 22 · Climate change is personal. It is not abstract. The warming climate impacts our economies, influences our politics and culture, threatens the food we eat and the water we drink; it even affects our love lives.
As climate change accelerates and extreme heat and climate disasters displace more people around the world, the crisis is increasingly disrupting our fundamental sense of where we belong and what we consider home.
We saw that last summer, in Maui, Hawaii, when the deadliest wildfire in the US in more than a century leveled the historic town of Lahaina, killed more than 100 people, and displaced thousands of residents from their homes.
In the immediate wake of ...
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Climate Change Will Increase Value of Residential Rooftop Solar Panels Across US, Study Shows:

 
Climate Change Will Increase Value of Residential Rooftop Solar Panels Across US, Study Shows - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Climate change will increase the future value of residential rooftop solar panels across the United States by up to 19% by the end of the century, according to a new University of Michigan-led study.
The study defines the value of solar, or VOS, as household-level financial benefits from electricity bill savings plus revenues from selling excess electricity to the grid -- minus the initial installation costs.
For many U.S. households, increased earnings from residential rooftop solar could total up to hundreds of dollars annually by the end of the century, say the authors of the study, which is scheduled for publication April 19 in the journal Nature Climate ...
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Could Trump Cancel the IRA?:

 
Could Trump Cancel the IRA? - Legal Planet
Apr 22 · The Inflation Reduction Act is Biden’s signature climate initiative. Trump has already called for repealing it, and so have some Republicans in Congress. Given the IRA’s huge cuts in carbon emissions, that would be a tragedy. Can he do that?
He would certainly face some very significant barriers. Trump would need Republican majorities in the Senate (very likely) and the House (less likely). When Trump was in office before, the Republicans found it difficult to pass legislation, and today’s GOP House can barely manage to function. Although they’ve expressed vociferous opposition to the IRA, it wouldn’t be at the top of their list of legislative priorities. And the IRA is ...
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Cutting carbon by 'electrifying everything’:

 
Cutting carbon by 'electrifying everything’ - Greenbiz
Apr 21 · Sponsored: Electrifying infrastructure is an investment in the future. From buildings to vehicles, electrification can be done with technology we have right now.
Siemens collaborates with Ford on customized electric vehicle charger for All-Electric F-150 Lightning Retail customers. Image courtesy of Siemens.
Siemens.
Across the United States, we are witnessing the transition to the "electrification of everything" to support the decarbonization of our environment. The technology to accomplish a fully electric transformation is already available - from electrifying buildings and vehicles to navigating the impact to the grid. But if we are going to address climate ...
| By Matt Helgeson    Read more ...
 

Czechs 3D-print Eiffel Tower from ocean waste for Olympics:

 
Czechs 3D-print Eiffel Tower from ocean waste for Olympics - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · A Czech company is 3D-printing a giant Eiffel Tower model for a local Olympics event, using recycled ocean waste as the primary material.
The 14-meter-high (46-foot) model will be installed at an Olympic festival in the north of the Czech Republic, where the public can try different Olympic sports during the Paris Games in July and August.
Jan Hrebabecky, the owner of the 3DDen printing farm, uses printing filament made from ocean waste.
"The material for the Eiffel Tower comes from the shores of Thailand," he told AFP.
"It has excellent mechanic and chemical qualities, great UV resistance, and it is practically immortal."
Collected by Thai fishermen, ...
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Demystifying Ocean Carbon Dioxide Removal:

 
Demystifying Ocean Carbon Dioxide Removal - Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist)
Apr 17 · More information at: https://www.eesi.org/041624ocean
The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) and the World Resources Institute (WRI) held a briefing about ocean carbon dioxide removal (CDR). Reaching global climate goals will require not only deep and rapid reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, but also large-scale removal of excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. While federal funding for research, development, and demonstration of land-based CDR approaches and technologies has increased significantly in recent years, the ocean also presents opportunities for carbon removal.
The ocean covers 70% of the Earth and serves as its largest carbon sink, holding 42 ...
| By eesionline    Read more ...
 

Denmark launches its biggest offshore wind farm tender:

 
Denmark launches its biggest offshore wind farm tender - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · The Danish Energy Agency on Monday launched its biggest tender for the construction of offshore wind farms, aimed at producing six gigawatts by 2030 - more than double Denmark's current capacity.
Offshore wind is one of the major sources of green energy that Europe is counting on to decarbonize electricity production and reach its 2050 target of net zero carbon production, but it remains far off the pace needed to hit its targets.
Denmark's offshore wind parks currently generate 2.7 gigawatts of electricity, with another one GW due in 2027.
The tender covers six sites in four zones in Danish waters: North Sea I, Kattegat, Kriegers Flak II and Hesselo.
"We are ...
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Early analysis finds eclipse had noticeable effect on birds:

 
Early analysis finds eclipse had noticeable effect on birds - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · Early results from a study of the April 8 total solar eclipse show a more noticeable effect on bird behavior than during the last eclipse.
"From the data we've analyzed so far, it looks like a similar pattern of aerial biological activity that we documented during the 2017 solar eclipse, but it was even more pronounced," said Cornell Lab researcher Andrew Farnsworth.
"The 13 weather radar stations in the path of the April eclipse measured noticeable decreases in typical daytime biological activities such as the movements of hawks and other soaring and insect-eating birds like swallows - but, as in 2017, the daytime darkness was not enough to trigger nocturnal migration ...
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Earth Day 2024: Four effective strategies to reduce household food waste:

 
Earth Day 2024: Four effective strategies to reduce household food waste - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · 1.3 billion tons of food is enough to feed more than 3 billion people.
Food waste contributes to nearly 8% to 10% of all greenhouse gas emissions. That level of emissions is on the scale of what a large country would produce—just under total emission estimates of the United States and China—posing serious contributions to climate change.
The greatest contributors to food waste are high-income countries, where the average consumer wastes between 95–115 kilograms of food per year. In Canada, approximately 60% of food produced is lost or wasted per year, costing an estimated $49.5 billion. This figure constitutes about half the annual food purchase costs ...
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Earth Day 2024: The Climate Benefits of the Inflation Reduction Act Are Worth Celebrating:

 
Earth Day 2024: The Climate Benefits of the Inflation Reduction Act Are Worth Celebrating - Union of Concerned Scientists - Energy
Apr 21 · Leading up to Earth Day this year, I’ve been reflecting on the meaning and purpose of the annual celebration. Earth Day began under the Nixon Administration in 1970 as a day to support environmental protection and has grown to include nations and communities around the world in appreciation of Mother Earth.
Of course, like any other holiday, there have been instances of co-optation where big polluters seek to cover up their dirty deeds and greenwash their image by sponsoring Earth Day festivities. But I’m looking to celebrate the positives.
I’ve been to my fair share of trash cleanups, concerts, and craft fairs, but this year there’s one big policy I want to focus on ...
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Ecosystems are deeply interconnected - environmental research, policy and management should be too:

 
Ecosystems are deeply interconnected - environmental research, policy and management should be too - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · We have a lot to learn still, but as we show in our research, using current ecological knowledge more effectively could deliver substantial environmental gains.
Our work focuses on improving links between research and ecosystem management to identify key trigger points for action in a framework that joins land, freshwater and sea ecosystems.
Specifically, we investigate solutions to environmental and societal problems that stem from the disparities between scientific research, policy and management responses to environmental issues.
We need managers and policy makers to consider ecological tipping points and how they can cascade though ecosystems from land into ...
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Energy-smart bricks keep waste out of landfill:

 
Energy-smart bricks keep waste out of landfill - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · RMIT University engineers collaborated with Visy—Australia's largest recycling company—to make bricks with a minimum of 15% waste glass and 20% combusted solid waste (ash), as substitutes for clay.
Test results indicate that using these bricks in the construction of a single-story building could reduce household energy bills by up to 5% compared to regular bricks, due to improved insulation.
Replacing clay with waste materials in the brick production helped reduce the firing temperature by up to 20% compared with standard brick mixtures, offering potential cost savings to manufacturers.
Team leader Associate Professor Dilan Robert said about 1.4 ...
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Estimating emissions potential of decommissioned gas wells from shale samples:

 
Estimating emissions potential of decommissioned gas wells from shale samples - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · The findings, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, revealed that methane begins diffusing from the shale formation after a well is decommissioned and that this represents a notable source of methane emissions—comparable to the most significant emissions during drilling and operation of the well.
"Natural gas is an important energy resource that has helped the U.S. lower its carbon dioxide emissions, but we also understand methane can be a potential hazard," said Shimin Liu, professor of energy and mineral engineering at Penn State and a co-author of the study. "What this work does is give us a proactive way to understand what's going on in the ...
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Europe suffered record number of 'extreme heat stress' days in 2023: Monitors:

 
Europe suffered record number of 'extreme heat stress' days in 2023: Monitors - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Europe endured a record number of "extreme heat stress" days in 2023, two leading climate monitors said Monday, underscoring the threat of increasingly deadly summers across the continent.
In a year of contrasting extremes, Europe witnessed scorching heat waves but also catastrophic flooding, withering droughts, violent storms and its largest wildfire.
These disasters inflicted billions of dollars in damages and impacted more than two million people, the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service and the UN's World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said in a new joint report.
The consequences for health were particularly acute, with heat singled out by these agencies ...
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Exploring a molecular mechanism that facilitates thermophilic fungal adaptation to temperature change:

 
Exploring a molecular mechanism that facilitates thermophilic fungal adaptation to temperature change - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · In early 2010, the team reported that a predominant thermophilic fungus Thermomyces dupontii produced a new class of prenylated indole alkaloids (PIAs), bearing the striking structural features of a key putative versatile precursor that has long been proposed for the well-known complex PIAs in mesophilic fungi.
In their latest study published in the journal Mycology, the team sought to determine why T. dupontii produced such a class of PIAs. They aimed at two P450 genes in the gene cluster responsible for PIAs, because P450 can modify and transform secondary metabolites to generate diverse and complex metabolites.
What's more, the ecological importance of P450 genes ...
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Exposure to Air Pollution During the First Two Years of Life Is Associated With Worse Attention Capacity in Children:

 
Exposure to Air Pollution During the First Two Years of Life Is Associated With Worse Attention Capacity in Children - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A growing body of research shows that exposure to air pollution, especially during pregnancy and childhood, may have a negative impact on brain development. Now a study led by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health (ISGlobal), a centre supported by the "la Caixa" Foundation, has found that exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) during the first two years of life is associated with poorer attention capacity in children aged 4 to 8, especially in boys. NO2 is a pollutant that comes mainly from traffic emissions.
The study, published in Environment International, shows that higher exposure to NO2 was associated with poorer attentional function in 4- to 6-year-olds, with increased ...
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Extreme weather should be defined according to impacts on climate-vulnerable communities:

 
Extreme weather should be defined according to impacts on climate-vulnerable communities - Nature Climate Change
Apr 22 · Climate change and related extreme weather events (EWEs) are expected to widen social and health inequalities. Yet, EWE thresholds and associated adaptation strategies do not centre experiences of vulnerable communities. This study explored the impacts of temperature- and precipitation-based EWEs for women in informal settlements, whether meteorological definitions of these EWEs capture impacts and whether self-reported impacts can be used to develop impact-based thresholds. We combined meteorological data with longitudinal monthly survey data collected from September 2022 through February 2023 from a probability sample of 800 women in two informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya. ...    Read more ...
 

Feedback loop that is melting ice shelves in West Antarctica revealed:

 
Feedback loop that is melting ice shelves in West Antarctica revealed - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · The study, titled "Antarctic Slope Undercurrent and onshore heat transport driven by ice shelf melting" and published in Science Advances, sheds new light on the mechanisms driving the melting of ice shelves beneath the surface of the ocean, which have been unclear until now.
The West Antarctic Ice Sheet has been losing mass in recent decades, contributing to global sea level rise. If it were to melt entirely, global sea levels would rise by around five meters.
It's known that Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW), a water mass that is up to 4°C above local freezing temperatures, is flowing beneath the ice shelves in West Antarctica and melting them from below. Since so much ...
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Feedback Loop That Is Melting Ice Shelves in West Antarctica Revealed:

 
Feedback Loop That Is Melting Ice Shelves in West Antarctica Revealed - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · The study, published in Science Advances, sheds new light on the mechanisms driving the melting of ice shelves beneath the surface of the ocean, which have been unclear until now.
The West Antarctic Ice Sheet has been losing mass in recent decades, contributing to global sea level rise. If it were to melt entirely, global sea levels would rise by around five meters.
It's known that Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW), a water mass that is up to 4°C above local freezing temperatures, is flowing beneath the ice shelves in West Antarctica and melting them from below. Since so much of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet lies below sea level, it is particularly vulnerable to this warm ...
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First discovery in decades of blue whales near Seychelles:

 
First discovery in decades of blue whales near Seychelles - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 22 · Their populations experienced a 89%–97% decline due to commercial whaling activities worldwide that started in the North Atlantic in 1868. Blue whales were primarily valued for their blubber, transformed into oil and used in cosmetics and soap, for the lubrication of industrial equipment, and as lamp oil. In 1978, the last deliberate capture of a blue whale was recorded off Spain.
Today, blue whales are found in all oceans except the Arctic. They usually migrate from their summer feeding grounds where they almost exclusively feed on krill to their winter breeding grounds. However, their migration patterns are still poorly understood, particularly in the Indian Ocean, ...
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Free Course Aims to Train Advertisers to Combat Climate Change:

 
Free Course Aims to Train Advertisers to Combat Climate Change - Sustainable Brands
Apr 22 · Good-Loop’s Good-Media Academy outlines how climate change impacts the ad industry, and what it can do to mitigate it.
Today, Good-Loop, an ethical ad agency that “exists to make advertising a positive force in the world,” launched its Good-Media Academy - a free course designed to teach agency teams the principles that make up “Good-Media,” and educate participants about the technologies available to mitigate the environmental impact of their campaigns.
Williams - who told Sustainable Brands® (SB) in a recent interview that her previous experience in advertising was the “antithesis of sustainability” - says the idea for Good-Loop, the first B Corp-certified ad-tech ...
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From the coast to the deep sea, changing oxygen levels affect marine life in different ways:

 
From the coast to the deep sea, changing oxygen levels affect marine life in different ways - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.
As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals' resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.
By the coast
For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, ...
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Future hurricanes could compromise New England forests' ability to store and sequester carbon:

 
Future hurricanes could compromise New England forests' ability to store and sequester carbon - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Nature-based climate solutions can help mitigate climate change, especially in forested regions capable of storing and sequestering vast amounts of carbon. New research published in Global Change Biology indicates that a single hurricane in New England, one of the most heavily forested regions in the United States, can down 4.6–9.4% of the total above-ground forest carbon, an amount much greater than the carbon sequestered annually by New England's forests.
The work revealed that emissions from hurricanes are not instantaneous - it takes approximately 19 years for downed carbon to become a net emission, and 100 years for 90% of the downed carbon to be emitted.
Models ...
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Guardian Essential poll: voters back Labor’s Future Made in Australia plan while overestimating cost of renewables:

 
Guardian Essential poll: voters back Labor’s Future Made in Australia plan while overestimating cost of renewables - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · Results highlight the difficulties government faces in selling energy transition to sceptical public
Voters have backed Anthony Albanese’s Future Made in Australia plan but are under the misapprehension that renewables are the most expensive form of power.
Those are the results of Guardian’s latest Essential poll of 1,145 voters, illustrating the difficulty for Labor of selling the energy transition to sceptical voters.
Albanese’s net approval was steady at -5%, with 48% disapproving of the job the prime minister is doing and 43% approving.
The opposition leader, Peter Dutton, received a positive rating of +3%. Some 44% approve of the job Dutton is doing, up ...
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High air pollution in Denmark may impact children's academic performance:

 
High air pollution in Denmark may impact children's academic performance - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Pollution from traffic, farming and wood stoves may have a negative effect on children's cognitive development, according to a new study published in Environment International on Danish students' performance in the lower secondary school leaving examination.
You probably don't think about it, but in most parts of the country the air we breathe is anything but clean.
In most parts of Denmark air pollution is double the recommended WHO level, with the highest levels found in heavily trafficked cities and southern Denmark, which is affected by polluted air blowing in from the south.
And polluted air can affect our health, previous research has shown. In fact, air ...
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High interest rates could add billions to UK green energy transition, says report:

 
High interest rates could add billions to UK green energy transition, says report - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · Resolution Foundation calls for fourfold increase in renewable power investment to reduce pressure on household bills
A permanent shift to higher interest rates could add billions of pounds to the UK’s renewable energy transition, a leading thinktank has warned.
Borrowing costs have soared since the easing of pandemic lockdowns and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as the world’s leading central banks raised interest rates to tackle inflation – pushing up the costs of investment in infrastructure across advanced economies including for green power generation schemes.
The Resolution Foundation said £29bn a year could therefore be added to household energy bills in 2050 ...
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Highest-level rainstorm warning issued in south China's Guangdong:

 
Highest-level rainstorm warning issued in south China's Guangdong - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · More than 100,000 people have been evacuated due to heavy rain and fatal floods in southern China, with the government issuing its highest-level rainstorm warning for the affected area on Tuesday.
Torrential rains have lashed Guangdong in recent days, swelling rivers and raising fears of severe flooding that state media said could be of the sort only "seen around once a century".
On Tuesday, the megacity of Shenzhen was among the areas listed as experiencing "heavy to very heavy downpours", the city's meteorological observatory said, adding the risk of flash floods was "very high".
Images from Qingyuan - a city in northern Guangdong that is part of the low-lying ...
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Honda to build major EV plant in Canada: govt source:

 
Honda to build major EV plant in Canada: govt source - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · Japanese auto giant Honda will open an electric vehicle plant in eastern Canada, a Canadian government source familiar with the multibillion-dollar project told AFP on Monday.
The federal government as well as the province of Ontario, where the plant will be built, will both provide some financial incentives for the deal, according to the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The official announcement is due Thursday, though Ontario premier Doug Ford hinted at the deal on Monday.
"This week, we've landed a new deal. It will be the largest deal in Canadian history. It'll be double the size of Volkswagen," he said, referring to a battery plant announced last ...
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How creating less-gassy cows could help fight climate change:

 
How creating less-gassy cows could help fight climate change - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · The food system, including grazing animals such as cows, generates major sources of methane mainly due to cattle digestion, manure decomposition and land use for grazing.
To look for solutions, researchers from the Curtin University Sustainability Policy Institute analyzed 27 academic publications and identified dozens of potential strategies to reduce methane emissions from Australia's beef and dairy sectors. "Meta-Analysis and Ranking of the Most Effective Methane Reduction Strategies for Australia's Beef and Dairy Sector" was published in Climate.
Study lead Merideth Kelliher said the fastest way to lower methane emissions would be to convert farmland into wetlands ...
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How light can vaporize water without the need for heat:

 
How light can vaporize water without the need for heat - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · And yet, it turns out, we've been missing a major part of the picture all along.
In a series of painstakingly precise experiments, a team of researchers at MIT has demonstrated that heat isn't alone in causing water to evaporate. Light, striking the water's surface where air and water meet, can break water molecules away and float them into the air, causing evaporation in the absence of any source of heat.
The astonishing new discovery could have a wide range of significant implications. It could help explain mysterious measurements over the years of how sunlight affects clouds, and therefore affect calculations of the effects of climate change on cloud cover and ...
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How potatoes, corn and beans led to breakthrough in smart windows technology:

 
How potatoes, corn and beans led to breakthrough in smart windows technology - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · A study from researchers at The University of Texas at Austin aims to solve these problems through a new type of electrochromic device and materials. The device uses common, low-cost, sustainable building blocks such as amylose, a natural polymer found in corn, potatoes and beans.
"There's an urgent need to develop novel sustainable electrochromic materials and devices with excellent properties for smart windows," said Guihua Yu, a professor in the Cockrell School of Engineering's Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Texas Materials Institute.
"The biomass materials we extracted from corn, potatoes and other common sources enable the achievement of ...
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How should Georgia elect key utility regulators? US Supreme Court asked to weigh in:

 
How should Georgia elect key utility regulators? US Supreme Court asked to weigh in - Grist Climate and Energy
Apr 24 · This coverage is made possible through a partnership with WABE and Grist, a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.
In a case that could impact other lawsuits on voting rights, Black voters who sued over Georgia’s elections for key utility regulators are appealing their case to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Those elections for the Georgia Public Service Commission have been on hold for years and while last week a federal appeals court lifted an injunction blocking the elections from taking place, there is little chance the elections will happen this year.
Public Service Commissioners have enormous ...
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How spicy does mustard get depending on the soil?:

 
How spicy does mustard get depending on the soil? - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Can microbes in the soil also contribute to taste?
In a recent study published in New Phytologist, former Ph.D. student Corrine Walsh at the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) at the University of Colorado Boulder and CIRES Fellow Noah Fierer have run one of the first experiments to determine whether soil microorganisms like bacteria and fungi influence the flavor of a crop. Their target: the spiciness of mustard seeds.
"I thought that was an interesting question," Walsh said. "We know microbes and plants communicate via chemicals—could those chemicals impact plant flavor?"
Previous research has confirmed that soil properties ...
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How to talk to a climate doomer (even if that doomer is you):

 
How to talk to a climate doomer (even if that doomer is you) - Yale Climate Connections - Communicating
Apr 23 · Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Yale Climate Connections
So someone you love is feeling doomy about climate change. Maybe they’ve experienced a catastrophic storm and know there’s more where that came from. Maybe they lost hope when the latest round of temperature records were shattered. Maybe they think it’s too late to fix the problem (it’s not), or that not enough people care.
Maybe the doomer is you. At least on some days.
To help ease those doomist feelings, we asked a couple of experts for their take: Susan Joy Hassol, the climate communication veteran who served as senior science writer on three ...
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In Ecuadoran Amazon, butterflies provide a gauge of climate change:

 
In Ecuadoran Amazon, butterflies provide a gauge of climate change - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Biologists on a trail in the Ecuadoran Amazon hold their breath as they distribute a foul-smelling delicacy to lure butterflies, critical pollinators increasingly threatened by climate change.
A team has hung 32 traps made of green nets, each baited with rotting fish and fermented bananas. They are meant to blend in with the forest canopy. Their pungent odor clearly does not.
Since last August, a team of biologists and park rangers has been monitoring butterfly numbers in the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve, a park famed for its abundant flora and fauna.
They catch and document the colorful insects, releasing most with an identifying mark on their wings. Some of them, ...
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In photos: Heavy rains cause massive flooding in China’s Guangdong province:

 
In photos: Heavy rains cause massive flooding in China’s Guangdong province - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 22 · Heavy rains continued to batter southern China on Monday, forcing tens of thousands of people from their homes as rescuers raced to evacuate those trapped by flooding and locate at least 11 missing residents.
The historical levels of rain across Guangdong province have come earlier than the region’s usual flood season, between May and June, prompting concerns about the effects of climate change on the country.
April 22 | Qingyuan, Guangdong province
The region has been pummeled by heavy rain since Thursday, triggering landslides that buried buildings and floods covering villages and cities.
April 22 | Qingyuan, Guangdong province
Residents row a boat on ...
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In Vietnam, farmers reduce methane emissions by changing how they grow rice:

 
In Vietnam, farmers reduce methane emissions by changing how they grow rice - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · That and the giant drone, its wingspan similar to that of an eagle, chuffing high above as it rains organic fertilizer onto the knee-high rice seedlings billowing below.
Using less water and using a drone to fertilize are new techniques that Van is trying and Vietnam hopes will help solve a paradox at the heart of growing rice: The finicky crop isn't just vulnerable to climate change but also contributes uniquely to it.
Rice must be grown separately from other crops and seedlings have to be individually planted in flooded fields; backbreaking, dirty work requiring a lot of labor and water that generates a lot of methane, a potent planet-warming gas that can trap more ...
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Interface Commits to Carbon Negativity, Without Offsets, by 2040:

 
Interface Commits to Carbon Negativity, Without Offsets, by 2040 - Sustainable Brands
Apr 23 · The sustainability leader sets out to hit its climate goals through direct carbon reduction and carbon storage - and challenges industry peers to do the same.
Interface, Inc - a global leader in sustainable flooring solutions - has announced a new focus on direct carbon reduction and carbon storage to meet the urgency of the climate crisis. The company is aligning its strategy to meet its climate commitments without the use of carbon offsets.
As we edge dangerously close to triggering several critical climate tipping points, absolute emission reductions become more and more critical to addressing the crisis. Beginning in 2025, Interface says it will repurpose former ...
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Investigating the porosity of sedimentary rock with neutrons:

 
Investigating the porosity of sedimentary rock with neutrons - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · At the Heinz Maier-Leibnitz Research Neutron Source (FRM II) at the Technical University of Munich (TUM), the networks of micropores were characterized using small and very small angle neutron scattering.
Dense, dark, compact—at first glance, the sedimentary rock samples that Dr. Amirsaman Rezaeyan has on his lab desk are only slightly different. Pores are not visible to the naked eye.
Nevertheless, it is precisely the pores that give the mudrocks their special properties: The pores, ranging from a few micrometers to sub-nanometers in size, are formed during sedimentation and compacted over time, determining the permeability. These pores are the decisive factor for ...
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Ion thermoelectric conversion devices for near room temperature:

 
Ion thermoelectric conversion devices for near room temperature - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · Prof. Zeng Wei of the Institute of Chemical Engineering, Guangdong Academy of Sciences, said that at the beginning, the research team mainly carried out study based on the thermal diffusion effect and published a series of research results. In spite of this, their results never realized the expected effect, and the prospect of practical application was not optimistic.
Later, they tried to make a further enhancement on the basis of the thermal current effect; that is, to incorporate the redox reaction of the electrode. The reason for this is that the thermal current effect is redox in the electrolyte, so the gain and loss of electrons mainly occur in the solution, and the ...
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Is Online Shopping Bad for the Planet?:

 
Is Online Shopping Bad for the Planet? - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 22 · In theory, getting deliveries can be more efficient than driving to the store. But you may still want to think before you add to cart.
Credit...Naomi Anderson-Subryan
Dionne Searcey is part of a rotating cast of Climate reporters and special guest writers who will answer your burning climate questions.
The convenience of online shopping is hard to beat. But it uses a lot of energy and resources and can lead to more waste.
Transportation needed for online shopping spews greenhouse emissions. Three billion trees are cut down every year to produce packaging for all kinds of things, e-commerce included, according to some estimates. The data centers needed to ...
| By Dionne Searcey    Read more ...
 

It’s Time to Stop Fanning the Flames of Climate Anxiety:

 
It’s Time to Stop Fanning the Flames of Climate Anxiety - Sustainable Brands
Apr 23 · To all fellow impact professionals, I encourage you to look at the narrative your communications are fueling and consider whether your business, your audience and the planet would benefit from a more nuanced view.
“Global boiling.”
“Two years left to save the world.”
“2023 was the hottest year on record by a long shot.”
Republicans repeal climate projects.
“Climate change costs the global economy $38 trillion a year.”
These are all headlines alarmingly familiar to anyone keeping up with climate news over the last year.
But let me share some highlights you may not have seen:
The Biden administration announced nearly $200 million in ...
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Italy fines Amazon over 'recurring' purchase option:

 
Italy fines Amazon over 'recurring' purchase option - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Italy's competition authority said Wednesday it had fined two Amazon companies 10 million euros ($10.6 million) for unfair commercial practices, for pushing customers into agreeing to "recurring" rather than "one-time" purchases online.
In a statement, the AGCM said the option to set up regular purchases was "pre-selected by default" on a wide selection of products listed on Amazon's Italian website.
"The graphic layout of the pre-selected recurring purchase option may lead consumers to buy products periodically - even when there is no actual need - thereby limiting their ability to choose freely," the AGCM said in a statement.
"Moreover, the conduct implemented by ...
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Japan's moon lander wasn't built to survive a weekslong lunar night. It's still going after 3:

 
Japan's moon lander wasn't built to survive a weekslong lunar night. It's still going after 3 - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Japan's first moon lander has survived a third freezing lunar night, Japan's space agency said Wednesday after receiving an image from the device three months after it landed on the moon.
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said the lunar probe responded to a signal from the earth Tuesday night, confirming it has survived another weekslong lunar night.
Temperatures can fall to minus 170 degrees Celsius (minus 274 degrees Fahrenheit) during a lunar night, and rise to around 100 Celsius (212 Fahrenheit) during a lunar day.
The probe, Smart Lander for Investing Moon, or SLIM, reached the lunar surface on Jan. 20, making Japan the fifth country to successfully place ...
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Lakes worldwide are facing a slew of health issues that may become chronic:

 
Lakes worldwide are facing a slew of health issues that may become chronic - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · In a new study, published in Earth's Future, researchers suggest using human health terminology and approaches to assess and treat the world's lake system issues. For example, lakes with multiple health problems could be characterized as having "multimorbidity," and regular screenings similar to human checkups could help detect issues in lakes early. These anthropomorphic analogies, the researchers report, may help people better connect with and protect nature.
Some high-income countries have methods to assess lake health, but the team introduced a global classification system modeled after the World Health Organization's human health classification system.
They used ...
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Laser-treated cork absorbs oil for carbon-neutral ocean cleanup:

 
Laser-treated cork absorbs oil for carbon-neutral ocean cleanup - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Oil spills are deadly disasters for ocean ecosystems. They can have lasting impacts on fish and marine mammals for decades and wreak havoc on coastal forests, coral reefs, and the surrounding land. Chemical dispersants are often used to break down oil, but they often increase toxicity in the process.
In Applied Physics Letters, researchers from Central South University, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev used laser treatments to transform ordinary cork into a powerful tool for treating oil spills.
They wanted to create a nontoxic, effective oil cleanup solution using materials with a low carbon footprint, but their ...
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Laser-Treated Cork Absorbs Oil for Carbon-Neutral Ocean Cleanup:

 
Laser-Treated Cork Absorbs Oil for Carbon-Neutral Ocean Cleanup - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Oil spills are deadly disasters for ocean ecosystems. They can have lasting impacts on fish and marine mammals for decades and wreak havoc on coastal forests, coral reefs, and the surrounding land. Chemical dispersants are often used to break down oil, but they often increase toxicity in the process.
In Applied Physics Letters, by AIP Publishing, researchers from Central South University, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev used laser treatments to transform ordinary cork into a powerful tool for treating oil spills.
They wanted to create a nontoxic, effective oil cleanup solution using materials with a low carbon ...
    Read more ...
 

Look to deadly Venus to find life in the universe, new paper argues:

 
Look to deadly Venus to find life in the universe, new paper argues - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · "We often assume that Earth is the model of habitability, but if you consider this planet in isolation, we don't know where the boundaries and limitations are," said UC Riverside astrophysicist and paper first author Stephen Kane. "Venus gives us that."
Though it also features a pressure cooker-like atmosphere that would instantly flatten a human, Earth, and Venus share some similarities. They have roughly the same mass and radius. Given the proximity to that planet, it's natural to wonder why Earth turned out so differently.
Many scientists assume that insolation flux, the amount of energy Venus receives from the sun, caused a runaway greenhouse situation that ruined ...
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Major investors leading push against Woodside’s climate plans ahead of AGM:

 
Major investors leading push against Woodside’s climate plans ahead of AGM - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · Norway’s KLP and the UK’s LGIM among those who say they have concerns over energy giant’s carbon transition goals
Woodside Energy is facing the prospect of an overwhelming protest vote against its climate plans when shareholders meet on Wednesday, as global investors pick apart the emissions strategy of Australia’s biggest oil and gas company.
Norway’s largest pension fund, KLP, and Britain’s biggest asset manager, LGIM, are the latest investors to disclose they will vote against Woodside’s climate report, citing concerns over its carbon transition plans.
Critics have described Woodside’s strategy as overly reliant on offsets and not aligned with Paris climate ...
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Mangrove blue carbon at higher risk of microplastic pollution:

 
Mangrove blue carbon at higher risk of microplastic pollution - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Microplastic pollution (particles <5 mm diameter) is one such issue affecting mangroves in particular. These tiny fragments can be of primary origin, such as microbeads used in personal care products like face washes and even toothpaste, or secondary from the decomposition of larger plastic pieces, such as water bottles and plastic bags.
Previous research has estimated that up to 12.7 million tons of plastic pollution entered the oceans in 2010, which is expected to have doubled by 2025 without appropriate intervention, and is carried globally via wind and currents.
Associate Professor Peng Zhang, of Guangdong Ocean University, China, and colleagues investigated the ...
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Marginalized Communities Developed 'Disaster Subculture' When Living Through Extreme Climate Events:

 
Marginalized Communities Developed 'Disaster Subculture' When Living Through Extreme Climate Events - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Locations around the globe are experiencing climate disasters on a regular basis. But some of the most marginalized populations experience disasters so often it has come to be normalized.
A new study from the University of Kansas found residents of one Seoul, South Korea, neighborhood have grown so accustomed to living through extreme climate events they have developed a "disaster subculture" that challenges both views of reality and how social agencies can help.
Joonmo Kang, assistant professor of social welfare, spent a year living in Jjokbang-chon, an extremely impoverished neighborhood in Seoul, as part of an ethnographic research project. Residents there routinely ...
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Mitochondrial DNA copy number contributes to growth diversity in allopolyploid fish:

 
Mitochondrial DNA copy number contributes to growth diversity in allopolyploid fish - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 22 · Understanding the relationship between mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and animal growth could provide valuable information for selective breeding in aquaculture. However, the complex interactions between genetics and environmental factors often hinders progress in this field. To that end, a recent study published in Reproduction and Breeding investigated the cross-sectional diameter of skeletal muscle fibers in allotriploid fish with different growth traits.
"Distant hybridization rapidly generates diverse genotypes and phenotypes, offering a rich resource for studying the role of genetic regulation in shaping phenotypes," explains co-corresponding author Li Ren, a researcher at ...
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More support needed to help households transition to green energy, UK research concludes:

 
More support needed to help households transition to green energy, UK research concludes - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · New gas boiler installations need to be phased out before 2050 in order for the UK to meet its climate change targets. There are grants of £7,500 available in England and Wales to help with the cost of installing heat pumps.
The study draws on data from deliberative workshops representing a diversity of geographic and housing contexts across the UK.
Academics found that while participants were open to the fact that there needed to be a move away from fossil fuel use for heating, there were also concerns about the impact such changes might have on their finances as well as the upheaval of retrofitting homes.
No one retrofit measure was seen as preventing ...
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More than coral: The unseen casualties of record-breaking heat on the Great Barrier Reef:

 
More than coral: The unseen casualties of record-breaking heat on the Great Barrier Reef - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 22 · We're shocked and saddened by images of stark white coral skeletons. But the damage done by heat underwater goes much further. A living coral reef is a complex ecosystem teeming with vastly more species than the corals. Not only that, but 95% of the habitat on the reef is not coral, but sediment and sand, hotspots of hidden biodiversity. So, what happens to this cornucopia of life when subjected to extreme temperature stress?
We are currently on One Tree Island on the southern reef. It's home to a research station and has one of the highest levels of protection within the whole reef.
What have we found? So far, the signs are not good. When we dive underwater, we can ...
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Mountain villages bearing direct brunt of climate change:

 
Mountain villages bearing direct brunt of climate change - kathmandupost
Apr 22 · An avalanche on Mt Manaslu in Gorkha district on Sunday morning crashed into the Birendra lake, setting off flash floods downstream. The details of resulting losses have yet to be received, but reports said a wooden bridge that connected Samdu and Samagaun villages was swept away by the flood.
Following the incident, the Ministry of Home Affairs issued an alert asking people downstream and those living near the Budhi Gandaki River to take precautions, as floods could cause damage.
“Snow and debris from the avalanche that fell into the lake caused flash floods,” said Nima Lama, chairman of Chumnubri Rural Municipality of Gorkha district. “Although the effects of the ...
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NASA's CloudSat ends mission peering into the heart of clouds:

 
NASA's CloudSat ends mission peering into the heart of clouds - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · CloudSat, a NASA mission that peered into hurricanes, tallied global snowfall rates, and achieved other weather and climate firsts, has ended its operations. Originally proposed as a 22-month mission, the spacecraft was recently decommissioned after almost 18 years observing the vertical structure and ice/water content of clouds.
As planned, the spacecraft - having reached the end of its lifespan and no longer able to make regular observations - was lowered into an orbit last month that will result in its eventual disintegration in the atmosphere.
When launched in 2006, the mission's Cloud Profiling Radar was the first-ever 94 GHz wavelength (W-band) radar to fly in ...
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NASA's Voyager 1 resumes sending engineering updates to Earth:

 
NASA's Voyager 1 resumes sending engineering updates to Earth - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · For the first time since November, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft is returning usable data about the health and status of its onboard engineering systems. The next step is to enable the spacecraft to begin returning science data again. The probe and its twin, Voyager 2, are the only spacecraft to ever fly in interstellar space (the space between stars).
Voyager 1 stopped sending readable science and engineering data back to Earth on Nov. 14, 2023, even though mission controllers could tell the spacecraft was still receiving their commands and otherwise operating normally. In March, the Voyager engineering team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California confirmed ...
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Nearly 2 in 5 Americans breathe unhealthy air. Why it’s getting worse.:

 
Nearly 2 in 5 Americans breathe unhealthy air. Why it’s getting worse. - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 24 · A rising number of Americans - nearly 2 in 5 - has been living with unhealthy levels of air pollution, while the United States experienced a record number of days between 2020 and 2022 with very unhealthy or hazardous air, according to a new report.
More than 90 million people are living in places where the air quality is worse than a new U.S. standard, the American Lung Association reported Wednesday in its annual State of the Air assessment, which detailed a significant increase based on the stricter national particle pollution standard.
The total includes 72 million people who would not have been counted under the looser federal standard - reflecting the dramatic ...
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Net zero has become unhelpful slogan, says outgoing head of UK climate watchdog:

 
Net zero has become unhelpful slogan, says outgoing head of UK climate watchdog - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · Chris Stark says populist response and culture war around the term is inhibiting environmental progress
The concept of “net zero” has become a political slogan used to start a “dangerous” culture war over the climate, and may be better dropped, the outgoing head of the UK’s climate watchdog has warned.
Chris Stark, the chief executive of the Climate Change Committee (CCC), said sensible improvements to the economy and people’s lives were being blocked by a populist response to the net zero label, and he would be “intensely relaxed” about losing the term.
“Net zero has definitely become a slogan that I feel occasionally is now unhelpful, because it’s so associated ...
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New algorithm solves century-old problem for coral reef scientists:

 
New algorithm solves century-old problem for coral reef scientists - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · Zachary Ferris, a biological sciences Ph.D. student at Florida Tech, led development of the new computer-vision algorithm called ReScape. ReScape removes the perspective distortion from reefscape images by transforming them into top-down views, thus making all corals the correct size for analysis of reef conditions.
"By recovering the correct size of corals, ReScape allows scientists to begin extracting ecological data from countless coral reefscape images that have been archived for the past 140 years," Ferris said. "Now that this data can be extracted, ReScape also enables scientists to begin using reefscape imaging to conduct more extensive surveys because reefscape images ...
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New Report Details Just How Quickly Europe Is Warming:

 
New Report Details Just How Quickly Europe Is Warming - Huffington Post
Apr 22 · NAPLES, Italy (AP) - Europe is the fastest-warming continent and its temperatures are rising at roughly twice the global average, two top climate monitoring organizations reported Monday, warning of the consequences for human health, glacier melt and economic activity.
The U.N.’s World Meteorological Organization and the European Union’s climate agency, Copernicus, said in a joint report the continent has the opportunity to develop targeted strategies to speed up the transition to renewable resources like wind, solar and hydroelectric power in response to the effects of climate change.
The continent generated 43% of its electricity from renewable resources last year, up ...
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Nine practices from Native American culture that could help the environment:

 
Nine practices from Native American culture that could help the environment - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 22 · Since the first Earth Day in 1970, the world has experienced profound ecological changes. Wildlife populations have decreased by 69 percent, the result of habitat loss caused by rapid industrialization and changing temperatures. 2023 was the hottest year on record.
Certain ancient practices could mitigate the deleterious effects of global warming. From building seaside gardens to water management in desert terrain, these time-honored practices work with the natural world’s rhythms. Some might even hold the key to a more resilient future and a means of building security for both Indigenous communities and other groups disproportionately impacted by climate change.
Jim ...
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No Bull: How Creating Less-Gassy Cows Could Help Fight Climate Change:

 
No Bull: How Creating Less-Gassy Cows Could Help Fight Climate Change - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A Curtin University study has revealed breeding less-flatulent cows and restoring agricultural land could significantly reduce rising methane emission levels, which play a considerable role in climate change.
The food system, including grazing animals such as cows, generates major sources of methane mainly due to cattle digestion, manure decomposition and land use for grazing.
To look for solutions, researchers from the Curtin University Sustainability Policy Institute analysed 27 academic publications and identified dozens of potential strategies to reduce methane emissions from Australia's beef and dairy sectors.
Study lead Merideth Kelliher said the fastest way ...
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No more funding forests in Cambodia: Interface is ending offsets to go carbon-negative:

 
No more funding forests in Cambodia: Interface is ending offsets to go carbon-negative - Greenbiz
Apr 24 · The carpet company says its carbon-negative manufacturing means it can stop buying CO2 credits.
Instead of investing in offsets, Interface is looking to innovations internally and in its supply chain. Credit: GreenBiz/Sophia Davirro
Interface, the maker of technically innovative commercial carpet tiling, will stop paying for carbon offsets - which typically fund forest projects in developing countries - to reduce the impact of its greenhouse gas emissions.
Instead, starting in 2025, Interface will direct what it used to spend on offsets toward exploring manufacturing with raw materials that remove or store carbon, in hopes of becoming carbon-negative by 2040 - a ...
| By Elsa Wenzel    Read more ...
 

Planet sees 10 straight months of record-breaking heat:

 
Planet sees 10 straight months of record-breaking heat - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 21 · Californians have had weekend after weekend of cool, stormy weather and the Sierra Nevada has been blessed with a healthy snowpack. But the reality is that even the last few months have been more than 2 degrees hotter than average.
The planet is experiencing a horrifying streak of record-breaking heat, with March marking the 10th month in a row that the average global temperature has been the highest ever recorded.
It would be shocking if it wasn't so predictable. Despite everything we know about the effects of burning fossil fuels, humanity is still going in the wrong direction with self-destructive abandon. Last year greenhouse gas pollution climbed to a new high, a ...
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Planning at multiple scales for healthy corals and communities:

 
Planning at multiple scales for healthy corals and communities - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 22 · The work has been published in Nature Sustainability.
The nature-based approaches evaluated as key watershed (e.g., drainage area) interventions include ecosystem restoration or protection, and sustainable agriculture. Yet determining which areas to target for these interventions requires understanding the complex relationships between terrestrial and marine ecosystems, also known as "land-sea linkages," their benefits to people, and the spatial scale being considered.
This work pushed the boundaries of how scientists analyze biophysical and ecological relationships, using cutting-edge optimization models (for the first time in a coastal context) of how to maximize ...
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Planting trees in grasslands won't save the planet - instead, protect and restore forests:

 
Planting trees in grasslands won't save the planet - instead, protect and restore forests - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · They include agroforestry initiatives such as the Great Green Wall in the Sahel, or commercial timber plantations that double as carbon offset projects. These target millions of hectares in countries like Mozambique, Madagascar and Rwanda.
I am part of a team of ecologists and social scientists who are working to highlight the International Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists in 2026. Our goal is to protect and promote rangelands that combat desertification and support economic growth, resilient livelihoods and the sustainable development of pastoralism. In pursuit of this goal, we reviewed all the scientific studies we could find on the effects of planting trees in ...
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Plasma treatment enhances electrode material for fuel cells in industry, homes and vehicles:

 
Plasma treatment enhances electrode material for fuel cells in industry, homes and vehicles - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · These are a promising technology for cleaner and more efficient electrical power generation. Published in the Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, the study even shows that the cheaper-to-make air plasma is better-suited for processing the carbon material than pure nitrogen or oxygen plasma.
One way to make burning natural gas cleaner is to use fuel cells. These are devices that technically do not burn the fuel but rather oxidize it in a different manner. That process is friendlier to the environment, because it produces more useful power, less greenhouse gases and emits no pollutants such as nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, and aerosol particles.
Fuel cells are used ...
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Playing God? Weather Change Experiments in San Francisco:

 
Playing God? Weather Change Experiments in San Francisco - Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist)
Apr 20 | By CBN News    Read more ...
 

Q&A: Could automation, electrification of long-haul trucking reduce environmental impacts?:

 
Q&A: Could automation, electrification of long-haul trucking reduce environmental impacts? - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · For long-haul routes below 300 miles, electrification can reduce air pollution and greenhouse gas damages by 13%, or $587 million annually, according to the study. For long-haul routes above 300 miles, electrification of just the urban segments facilitated by hub-based automation of highway driving can reduce damages by 35%, or $220 million annually.
"It's the first study we know of that simultaneously studies a realistic model of automation and a realistic model of electrification—things that are feasible in the near term—and assesses their environmental benefits," said lead author Parth Vaishnav, assistant professor at the U-M School for Environment and ...
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Record electron temperatures for a small-scale, sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch fusion device achieved:

 
Record electron temperatures for a small-scale, sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch fusion device achieved - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Due to the electrons' ability to rapidly cool a plasma, this feat is a key hurdle for fusion systems and FuZE is the simplest, smallest and lowest cost device to have achieved it. Zap's technology offers the potential for a much shorter and more practical path to a commercial product capable of producing abundant, on-demand, carbon-free energy to the globe.
"These are meticulous, unequivocal measurements, yet made on a device of incredibly modest scale by traditional fusion standards," describes Ben Levitt, VP of R&D at Zap. "We've still got a lot of work ahead of us, but our performance to date has advanced to a point that we can now stand shoulder to shoulder with some of ...
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Research showcases Indigenous stewardship's role in forest ecosystem resilience:

 
Research showcases Indigenous stewardship's role in forest ecosystem resilience - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Western scientists and land managers have become increasingly cognizant of cultural burning, but its extent and purpose are generally absent from fire modeling research, said Skye Greenler, who led the partnership when she was a graduate research fellow in the OSU College of Forestry.
"We developed this project in collaboration with the Karuk Tribe to explore the impact of cultural burning at a landscape scale in a completely new way," she said. "The information that went into this model is not new at all—it's been held by Karuk Tribal members for millennia—but we developed new methods to bring the knowledge together and display it in a way that showcases the ...
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Researchers develop forest extent map for Mexico:

 
Researchers develop forest extent map for Mexico - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · One of the challenges facing researchers when it comes to evaluating the accuracy of forest extent, however, is that models use different remote sensing products that may have different definitions for what determines forest extent. In addition, on the ground surveys may sometimes come into conflict with what remote, satellite-based products are describing as forests.
To help quantify this problem, a group of researchers from the University of Delaware teamed up with an international group of collaborators. Together, they looked at forest extent estimates from seven regional and global land or tree cover remote sensing products across Mexico, using two independent forest ...
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Researchers develop high-energy-density aqueous battery based on halogen multi-electron transfer:

 
Researchers develop high-energy-density aqueous battery based on halogen multi-electron transfer - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · Aqueous batteries use water as the solvent for electrolytes, significantly enhancing the safety of the batteries. However, due to the limited solubility of the electrolyte and low battery voltage, aqueous batteries typically have a lower energy density. This means that the amount of electricity stored per unit volume of aqueous battery is relatively low.
In a study published in Nature Energy, a research group led by Prof. Li Xianfeng from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), in collaboration with Prof. Fu Qiang's group also from DICP, developed a multi-electron transfer cathode based on bromine and iodine, realizing a ...
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Researchers propose a new method for wind turbine blade recycling:

 
Researchers propose a new method for wind turbine blade recycling - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · Wind turbine blades play a crucial role in harnessing renewable energy but as these blades reach the end of their operational lifespan, the issue of disposal becomes a serious concern.
Made from composite materials, such as layers of fiberglass or carbon fiber reinforced with epoxy or polyester resin, these wind turbine blades can be used for 20 to 25 years. While these materials ensure the strength, lightness, and stiffness of turbine blades, they also significantly complicate the recycling of the equipment.
Pyrolysis: A promising strategy for wind turbine blade recycling
However, until a few years ago, wind turbine blades were almost impossible to recycle. ...
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Researchers uncover kinky metal alloy that won't crack at extreme temperatures at the atomic level:

 
Researchers uncover kinky metal alloy that won't crack at extreme temperatures at the atomic level - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · In this context, strength is defined as how much force a material can withstand before it is permanently deformed from its original shape, and toughness is its resistance to fracturing (cracking). The alloy's resilience to bending and fracture across an enormous range of conditions could open the door for a novel class of materials for next-generation engines that can operate at higher efficiencies.
The team, led by Robert Ritchie at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and UC Berkeley, in collaboration with the groups led by professors Diran Apelian at UC Irvine and Enrique Lavernia at Texas A&M University, discovered the alloy's surprising properties and then ...
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Restoring coastal habitat boosts wildlife numbers by 61% - but puzzling failures mean we can still do better:

 
Restoring coastal habitat boosts wildlife numbers by 61% - but puzzling failures mean we can still do better - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 22 · Pollution, coastal development, climate change and many other human impacts have degraded or destroyed swathes of mangrove forests, saltmarshes, seagrass meadows, macroalgae (seaweed) forests and coral and shellfish reefs. We've lost a staggering 85% of shellfish reefs around the world and coral is bleaching globally.
When healthy, these coastal habitats help feed the world by supporting fisheries. They are home to more than 100 species of charismatic marine megafauna, ranging from sharks to dugongs. They sequester carbon, thus helping to slow climate change. The list goes on.
Healthy coastal habitats are the gift that keeps on giving. We need them back, so there's a lot ...
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Revolutionizing agriculture for a sustainable future:

 
Revolutionizing agriculture for a sustainable future - Greenbiz
Apr 24 · Sponsored: Agoro Carbon redefines agriculture's climate role by offering quality carbon credits and focusing on regenerative practices.
Regenerative Agriculture, a solution to Climate Change. Image courtesy of Agoro Carbon.
This article is sponsored by Agoro Carbon.
The climate clock is ticking, and immediate action is necessary, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Agriculture must transition from being part of the problem to being a cornerstone of the solution. As the ongoing story of sustainability unfolds, agriculture is a key player and potential hero.
At Agoro Carbon, we are actively working to make this narrative a ...
| By Dylan Lubbe    Read more ...
 

Salesforce to lobby for new rules on AI’s environmental impact:

 
Salesforce to lobby for new rules on AI’s environmental impact - Greenbiz
Apr 22 · Computing uses up to 3 percent of global power consumption and AI could triple that, the company believes.
The Salesforce Tower in New York City. Image via Shutterstock/Arnett Murry
Salesforce will begin lobbying for new regulations requiring companies to disclose emissions data and efficiency standards for artificial intelligence.
The company announced the move Monday as part of its new "Sustainable AI Policy Priorities." It has previously published positions on ethics and equity related to AI, as have other big tech companies including Amazon, Google and Microsoft.
Salesforce’s new policy comes amid growing concern over the amount of electricity required to ...
| By Heather Clancy    Read more ...
 

Science-Based Climate Targets Key to Sustainable Tourism:

 
Science-Based Climate Targets Key to Sustainable Tourism - Sustainable Brands
Apr 22 · Regardless of whether a travel-related company has submitted its commitments to SBTi; setting specific, quantifiable, time-bound goals is essential for meaningfully reducing climate-changing emissions.
British mathematician Lord Kelvin is credited with saying that if you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it. Business management consultant Peter Drucker later offered his additional perspective when he said, “If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it.”
At a time when industries around the world need to drastically reduce their environmental footprint, these quotable missives offer more than nice soundbites: They clearly explain why definitive measurements are needed ...
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Scientists unlocked solar patterns that could help understand space weather:

 
Scientists unlocked solar patterns that could help understand space weather - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 21 · The sun is more than a heat lamp for Earth. It is constantly spitting streams of solar particles our way and, sometimes, powerful pockets of solar material that can jolt our planet. Now, scientists are unlocking another puzzle piece on what may drive extreme solar activity, which could bombard Earth and disrupt our technology.
The missing piece could be linked to unusual patterns of high energy bursting from the sun’s surface, according to recent research.
We’re used to hearing about the sun’s ultraviolet radiation, which we protect ourselves against with sunscreen. The sun also emits much more powerful gamma rays, which are the most energetic waves on an electromagnetic ...
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Solar Climate Intervention Virtual Symposium 10 (Dr. Ilaria Quaglia & Dr. Wake Smith):

 
Solar Climate Intervention Virtual Symposium 10 (Dr. Ilaria Quaglia & Dr. Wake Smith) - Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist)
Apr 24 · Solar Climate Intervention Virtual Symposium 10\n\nDr. Ilaria Quaglia (Cornell University, USA): | By Solar Climate Intervention Talks    Read more ...
 

Spintronics research shows material's magnetic properties can predict how a spin current changes with temperature:

 
Spintronics research shows material's magnetic properties can predict how a spin current changes with temperature - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Spintronics exploits the intrinsic spin of electrons, and fundamental to the field is controlling the flows of the spin degree of freedom, i.e., spin currents. Scientists are focused on ways to create, remove, and control them for future applications.
Detecting spin currents is no easy feat. It requires the use of macroscopic voltage measurement, which looks at the overall voltage changes across a material. However, a common stumbling block has been a lack of understanding as to how this spin current actually moves or propagates within the material itself.
A team of researchers now report a method to predict how spin current changes with temperature. The study is ...
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Squids' birthday influences mating: Male spear squids shown to become 'sneakers' or 'consorts' depending on birth date:

 
Squids' birthday influences mating: Male spear squids shown to become 'sneakers' or 'consorts' depending on birth date - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Understanding how mating tactics are influenced by birth date, and the environmental conditions at that time, can help researchers consider how squid might be affected by climate change and the implications for marine resource management.
What does your date of birth say about you? Maybe you feel it reveals something about your personality, or perhaps even your destiny. For male spear squid, it can tell us a lot about their love life.
A team of researchers in Japan have found that the mating tactics of spear squid are heavily influenced by the day they were born. These squid can be classified into two types according to their mating techniques: consorts, which fight off ...
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State's new law involving Puget Sound Energy aspires to set a course for the future:

 
State's new law involving Puget Sound Energy aspires to set a course for the future - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Over the past couple of years, Washington lawmakers have wrestled with a daunting task.
The problem: The state's largest utility, Puget Sound Energy, sells natural gas to nearly 1 million customers and burns gas and coal to electrify cities. That contributes millions of metric tons of planet-warming gases to the atmosphere.
It makes PSE one of the largest producers of greenhouse gas pollution in the state, ranked among fuel suppliers like Marathon, BP and Philips 66. And it represents a huge threat to the state's ambitious climate goals.
Lawmakers' original proposed fix would have been unprecedented in the country and required PSE to stop offering new commercial ...
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Study finds climate change is helping tropical fish invade Australian ocean water:

 
Study finds climate change is helping tropical fish invade Australian ocean water - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · A University of Adelaide study of shallow-water fish communities on rocky reefs in south-eastern Australia has found climate change is helping tropical fish species invade temperate Australian waters. The work is published in the Journal of Animal Ecology.
"The fish are traveling into these Australian ecosystems as larvae caught in the Eastern Australian Current, which is strengthening due to the warming climate," said the University of Adelaide's Professor Ivan Nagelkerken, Chief Investigator of the study.
"These larvae would not normally survive in the cooler Australian ocean water, but the warming Eastern Australian Current keeps the baby fish warm and increases their ...
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Study shows it's not too late to save the West Antarctic Ice Sheet:

 
Study shows it's not too late to save the West Antarctic Ice Sheet - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · More than 5 meters of potential global sea-level rise is locked within the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, so understanding whether the regions of the ice sheet that appear "stable" today might melt in the future is critical for forecasting how much and how fast our seas will rise around the world.
One such region that is currently stable is West Antarctica's Siple Coast, where rivers of ice flow over the continent and drain into the Ross Sea. This ice flow is slowed down by the Ross Ice Shelf, a floating mass of ice nearly the size of Spain, which serves as a buttress to the ice sheet glaciers. Compared to other ice shelves in West Antarctica, the Ross Ice Shelf has very little ...
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SUPPORT! Nakivale: Refugee-Led Biochar Enterprise in Uganda.:

 
SUPPORT! Nakivale: Refugee-Led Biochar Enterprise in Uganda. - Open Air (Carbon Capture)
Apr 23 · Farmer entrepreneurs in Nakivale, Uganda, Africa's oldest refugee settlement, are on the brink of taking their biochar production from pilot to sustainable business. With your generous help we can help them get there, improving deteriorated soil, reducing food insecurity and removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.\n\nIn 2023, OpenAir members all over the world helped crowdfund phase 1 of this project, funding the manufacture and installation of three biochar kilns in Nakivale. Since that time, the team has been recruited and trained, a regular supply of local waste biomass has been secured, and production has been ramping up daily for several months.\n\nThis amazing progress owes ... | By OpenAir    Read more ...
 

Talks on global plastic treaty begin in Canada:

 
Talks on global plastic treaty begin in Canada - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Negotiators from 175 nations began talks Tuesday on a proposed global treaty to reduce plastic pollution, which is found everywhere from mountain tops to ocean depths, and in human blood and breast milk.
"The world is counting on us to deliver a new treaty that will catalyze and guide the actions and international cooperation needed to deliver a future free of plastic pollution," said Luis Valdivieso, chair of the negotiations at the UN-led talks in Ottawa, Canada.
"Let's not fail," Valdivieso added as he opened the session that will run to April 29.
Nations agreed in 2022 to finalize a world-first treaty by the end of 2024, with concrete measures to battle plastic ...
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Tesla 1Q profit falls 55%, but stock jumps as company moves to speed production of cheaper vehicles:

 
Tesla 1Q profit falls 55%, but stock jumps as company moves to speed production of cheaper vehicles - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Tesla's first-quarter net income plummeted 55%, but its stock price surged in after-hours trading Tuesday as the company said it would move up production of new, more affordable vehicles.
The Austin, Texas, company said it made $1.13 billion from January through March compared with $2.51 billion in the same period a year ago.
Investors and analysts were looking to the earnings release for some sign that Tesla will move to end a stock slide this year and reverse the sales decline. The company did that in a letter to investors Tuesday, saying that production of smaller, more affordable models will start in the second half next year, ahead of previous guidance.
The ...
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Tesla cuts the price of its 'Full Self Driving' system by a third to $8,000:

 
Tesla cuts the price of its 'Full Self Driving' system by a third to $8,000 - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · Tesla knocked roughly a third off the price of its "Full Self Driving" system - which can't drive itself and so drivers must remain alert and be ready to intervene - to $8,000 from $12,000, according to the company website.
Tesla CEO and billionaire Elon Musk promised in 2019 that there would be a fleet of robotaxis on the road in 2020, but the promise has yet to materialize, and the system still has to be supervised by humans.
The cuts, which occurred on Saturday, follow Tesla's moves to slash $2,000 off the prices of three of its five models in the United States late Friday. That's the latest evidence of the challenges facing the electric vehicle maker.
Tesla ...
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Tesla earnings a 'moment of truth' for Musk after stumbles:

 
Tesla earnings a 'moment of truth' for Musk after stumbles - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · Tesla CEO Elon Musk faces heightened pressure with Tuesday's earnings report to reassure investors that recent stumbles are simply unexpected speed bumps - and not indications of a road to decline.
The electric car maker, which enjoyed scorching growth for most of 2022 and 2023, has experienced setbacks that analysts say have raised the stakes for the first-quarter report.
Tuesday's earnings and conference call are a "moment of truth" for Tesla and Musk, constituting "one of the most important moments in the company's history in our view," said a note from Wedbush.
Heading into 2024, Tesla watchers were already girding for a tougher path, with Musk's once-dominant ...
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The big quantum chill: Scientists modify common lab refrigerator to cool faster with less energy:

 
The big quantum chill: Scientists modify common lab refrigerator to cool faster with less energy - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · The scientists say that their prototype device, which they are now working to commercialize with an industrial partner, could annually save an estimated 27 million watts of power, $30 million in global electricity consumption, and enough cooling water to fill 5,000 Olympic swimming pools.
From stabilizing qubits (the basic unit of information in a quantum computer) to maintaining the superconducting properties of materials and keeping NASA's James Webb Space Telescope cool enough to observe the heavens, ultracold refrigeration is essential to the operation of many devices and sensors. For decades, the pulse tube refrigerator (PTR) has been the workhorse device for achieving ...
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The Biggest Barrier to a Vibrant Second-Hand EV Market? Price:

 
The Biggest Barrier to a Vibrant Second-Hand EV Market? Price - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · As early adopters of electric vehicles (EVs) trade up for the latest models, the used EV market is beginning to mature in the United States. Yet many potential buyers, particularly low-income drivers, are skeptical of EV's conveniences and are put off by the price, according to a study conducted at Rutgers University-New Brunswick.
"While the transition to electric vehicles is an important piece of reducing greenhouse-gas emissions, the market for used electric vehicles in the U.S. remains dominated by wealthy households," said Wei San Loh, a former graduate student of the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers-New Brunswick whose study is ...
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The corporate-startup handoff is broken. Here’s how to fix it.:

 
The corporate-startup handoff is broken. Here’s how to fix it. - Greenbiz
Apr 24 · Corporations can be vital supporters and partners for climate-tech startups.
Corporations need to align incentives and up their risk tolerance to work more effectively with startups. Source: sirtravelalot via Shutterstock
Successful startup-corporate partnerships - the full adoption of startup tech or integration into a corporation's business unit - are a relatively rare outcome. Corporate executives want to know how startup adoption will help their bottom line: will it open new markets and increase efficiency? Is it relatively easy to adopt?
Even when there is a good match, the transition often gets lost in corporate friction and complexity, due to either ...
| By Jake Mitchell    Read more ...
 

The Guardian Essential report:

 
The Guardian Essential report - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · Jobs will change, communities will be affected, but we have a shot at rising to the challenge of global heating
The climate crisis has long been defined by its lies: From the original sin of science denial, to Tony Abbott’s confected carbon tax panic, to the latest yellowcake straw man. But the most damaging porky of all might be that the transition to renewable energy will be easy.
Government messaging has propagated this myth, vacillating between the torpid technocracy of targets, acronyms and megawatt hours and the sunny spin that promises “a cheaper, cleaner energy future!”.
Both gloss over the hard truth that fundamentally changing the way Australia produces, ...
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The week ahead in climate policy:

 
The week ahead in climate policy - Greenbiz
Apr 22 · This week’s most important ongoing climate policy stories.
Plastic pollution on a beach. Photo: Shutterstock/Take Photo
| By Leah Garden    Read more ...
 

These 150-foot-high sails could help solve shipping’s climate problem:

 
These 150-foot-high sails could help solve shipping’s climate problem - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 22 · To cut costs and carbon emissions, cargo ships are putting a new spin on an ancient technology: the sail.
These aren’t the sailboats of yore. Modern sails look more like airplane wings, smokestacks or balloons, and they use artificial intelligence to catch the wind with little help from mariners who long ago forgot the art of hoisting a mainsail.
Sails can reduce an existing ship’s fuel consumption - and greenhouse emissions - by something like 10 or 20 percent, according to maritime experts, making them an attractive option for ship owners looking to cut costs or comply with environmental regulations.
Ships burn some of the world’s dirtiest fuels and generate ...
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Three dead, tens of thousands evacuated as storms strike south China:

 
Three dead, tens of thousands evacuated as storms strike south China - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Three people are dead and 11 others missing following storms that battered southern China, state media said Monday, with tens of thousands evacuated away from the torrential downpours.
Heavy rain has descended upon the vast southern province of Guangdong in recent days, swelling rivers and raising fears of severe flooding that state media said could be of the sort only "seen around once a century".
"The three deaths were reported in Zhaoqing City. They were trapped due to the rainfall and were found to have died at the site," state broadcaster Xinhua reported, citing local authorities.
Eleven others remain missing as search and rescue efforts in the area continue ...
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Three Places Changing Quickly to Fight Climate Change:

 
Three Places Changing Quickly to Fight Climate Change - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 22 · Paris is becoming a city of bikes. Across China, people are snapping up $5,000 electric cars. On Earth Day, a look at a few bright spots for emission reductions.
Glaciers are shrinking, coral reefs are in crisis and last year was the hottest on record. Atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, have passed a dangerous new threshold as people continue to burn fossil fuels. Is anyplace making progress on climate change?
The short answer is: It’s complicated, but yes.
In South America, one country has pivoted in less than a decade to generating almost all its electricity from a diverse mix of renewables. In China, an electric car that costs ...
| By Delger Erdenesanaa    Read more ...
 

Tropical Fish Are Invading Australian Ocean Water:

 
Tropical Fish Are Invading Australian Ocean Water - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A University of Adelaide study of shallow-water fish communities on rocky reefs in south-eastern Australia has found climate change is helping tropical fish species invade temperate Australian waters.
"The fish are travelling into these Australian ecosystems as larvae caught in the Eastern Australian Current, which is strengthening due to the warming climate," said the University of Adelaide's Professor Ivan Nagelkerken, Chief Investigator of the study.
"These larvae would not normally survive in the cooler Australian ocean water, but the warming Eastern Australian Current keeps the baby fish warm and increases their likelihood of survival."
The novel populations ...
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Turning to nature to improve vital water treatment:

 
Turning to nature to improve vital water treatment - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Escalating industrialization, urbanization and climate change in Asia present a significant challenge to maintaining water quality.
In an effort to improve water treatment, RMIT has collaborated in an international team supporting pilot projects in Vietnam, Sri Lanka and the Philippines through an Asia-Pacific Network for Global Change Research project.
Led by RMIT's Professor Jega Jegatheesan, the pilots included the construction of floating wetlands in Can Tho, Vietnam and Kandy, Sri Lanka, green roofs in Ho Chi Minh City and constructed wetland in the Philippines.
This saw 40 students at Can Tho University trained to build and install the structures in two ...
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Urgent need for logging loophole remedy within proposed Great Koala National Park:

 
Urgent need for logging loophole remedy within proposed Great Koala National Park - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · Led by Adjunct Senior Research Fellow Timothy Cadman, from Griffith University's Institute for Ethics, Governance and Law, the new report published in The International Journal of Social Quality highlighted exclusion of prime koala habitat from logging within the proposed park was inconsistent with koala protection efforts.
Dr. Cadman said the plans needed to also consider the integrity of the broader reserve habitat system and be accorded the requisite status of World Heritage.
The Great Koala National Park is set to cover 300,000 hectares of state forest and existing national parks from Grafton to Kempsey in Northern New South Wales.
The Park, to act as a safe ...
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US advances review of Nevada lithium mine amid concerns over endangered wildflower:

 
US advances review of Nevada lithium mine amid concerns over endangered wildflower - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · The Biden administration has taken a significant step in its expedited environmental review of what could become the third lithium mine in the U.S., amid anticipated legal challenges from conservationists over the threat they say it poses to an endangered Nevada wildflower.
The Bureau of Land Management released more than 2,000 pages of documents in a draft environmental impact statement last week for the Rhyolite Ridge mine. Lithium is a metal key to the manufacture of batteries for electric vehicles - a centerpiece of President Joe Biden's "green energy" agenda.
Officials for the bureau and its parent Interior Department trumpeted the news, saying the progress in the ...
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Victims of China floods race to salvage property:

 
Victims of China floods race to salvage property - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Victims of severe floods in southern China raced on Wednesday to salvage property from the muddy waters as authorities warned of more heavy rains to come.
Massive downpours have struck Guangdong province in recent days, triggering deluges that have claimed the lives of four people and forced the evacuation of more than 100,000.
The severe floods are virtually unheard of so early in the year even in lush, subtropical Guangdong, with one senior official linking them to worsening climate change.
AFP reporters in Shatang village on Wednesday saw staff and officials at a tourist resort taking advantage of a break in the rain to clear mud from the streets.
"The ...
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Warming Climate Is Putting More Metals Into Colorado's Mountain Streams:

 
Warming Climate Is Putting More Metals Into Colorado's Mountain Streams - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Warming temperatures are causing a steady rise in copper, zinc and sulfate in the waters of Colorado mountain streams affected by acid rock drainage. Concentrations of these metals have roughly doubled in these alpine streams over the past 30 years, a new study finds, presenting a concern for ecosystems, downstream water quality and mining remediation.
Natural chemical weathering of bedrock is the source of the rising acidity and metals, but the ultimate driver of the trend is climate change, the report found.
"Heavy metals are a real challenge for ecosystems," said lead author Andrew Manning, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver. "Some are quite toxic. ...
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Warming climate is putting more metals into Colorado's mountain streams:

 
Warming climate is putting more metals into Colorado's mountain streams - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Natural chemical weathering of bedrock is the source of the rising acidity and metals, but the ultimate driver of the trend is climate change, the report found.
"Heavy metals are a real challenge for ecosystems," said lead author Andrew Manning, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver. "Some are quite toxic. We are seeing regional, statistically significant trends in copper and zinc, two key metals that are commonly a problem in Colorado. It's not ambiguous, and it's not small."
The study was published in Water Resources Research.
Although the mechanism coupling warming temperatures to increased sulfide weathering is still an open research question, ...
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Water is at the heart of farmers’ struggle to survive in Benin:

 
Water is at the heart of farmers’ struggle to survive in Benin - Skeptical Science
Apr 24 · For the residents of Dassa-Zoumè, a city in the West African country of Benin, choosing between drinking water and having enough food has become a worrying dilemma.
“Last year, our horticultural production plummeted due to water scarcity,” said Chantal Agbangla, a farmer residing in Soclogbo, a town located about 30 minutes by car from the capital of Dassa-Zoumé. “We had to travel nine kilometers to find water, mainly for our agricultural and domestic needs.”
Family farming, a pillar of the economy in Dassa-Zoumè, is more threatened than ever by climate change. Small-scale farms cover only about 2% of cultivable land in the ...
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What are virtual power plants?:

 
What are virtual power plants? - Yale Climate Connections - Energy
Apr 22 · Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Yale Climate Connections
For decades, electricity has been produced at large power plants and then sent to homes and businesses.
But as rooftop solar and other renewable sources expand, energy can be generated all over.
Nemtzow: “For the first time, we can take distributed energy resources, which have been around for many years, but we can organize them to act like power plants.”
David Nemtzow is with the U.S. Department of Energy.
A so-called virtual power plant can be operated by a traditional utility. It can include solar panels, car batteries, ...
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What Fixed Charges on Your Electric Bill Could Mean for Charging an EV in California:

 
What Fixed Charges on Your Electric Bill Could Mean for Charging an EV in California - Union of Concerned Scientists - Vehicles
Apr 22 · Residential electricity rates for many Californians have increased significantly over the last year, making it more expensive to charge an electric vehicle (EV) at home. It’s still cheaper to recharge an EV than buy gasoline, but those savings have been eroded by surging electric rates.
Prompted by a state law, California’s utility regulator has proposed to change the way electricity is billed by adding a fixed monthly charge to all rate plans and making a corresponding reduction to the cost for each unit of electricity used.
Transportation is the largest sector for climate changing emissions, so it’s important that we transition our cars and trucks from gasoline to ...
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When red-hot isn't enough: New government heat risk tool sets magenta as most dangerous level:

 
When red-hot isn't enough: New government heat risk tool sets magenta as most dangerous level - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · The National Weather Service and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday—Earth Day—presented a new online heat risk system that combines meteorological and medical risk factors with a seven-day forecast that's simplified and color-coded for a warming world of worsening heat waves.
"For the first time we'll be able to know how hot is too hot for health and not just for today but for coming weeks," Dr. Ari Bernstein, director of the National Center for Environmental Health, said at a joint news conference by government health and weather agencies.
Magenta is the worst and deadliest of five heat threat categories, hitting everybody with what the ...
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Why is methane seeping on Mars? NASA scientists have new ideas:

 
Why is methane seeping on Mars? NASA scientists have new ideas - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · Living creatures produce most of the methane on Earth. But scientists haven't found convincing signs of current or ancient life on Mars, and thus didn't expect to find methane there. Yet, the portable chemistry lab aboard Curiosity, known as SAM, or Sample Analysis at Mars, has continually sniffed out traces of the gas near the surface of Gale Crater, the only place on the surface of Mars where methane has been detected thus far. Its likely source, scientists assume, are geological mechanisms that involve water and rocks deep underground.
If that were the whole story, things would be easy. However, SAM has found that methane behaves in unexpected ways in Gale Crater. It ...
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Wind and solar in limbo: Long waitlists to get on the grid are a 'leading barrier':

 
Wind and solar in limbo: Long waitlists to get on the grid are a 'leading barrier' - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · Ninety miles west of Chicago, the corn and soybean fields stretch to the sky, and dreams of the clean energy future dangle - just out of reach.
To the east of Route 52, there's the first phase of the 9,500-acre Steward Creek solar farm, in the works since 2019.
To the west, there's South Dixon Solar, which once hoped to begin construction on 3,800 acres in 2022.
Both projects have been approved by the Lee County Board. But neither can be built, according to a county official, due to PJM Interconnection, a powerful but little-known entity that controls access to the high-voltage electric grid in northern Illinois.
"There isn't anything we can do to help the ...
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Without proper management, Brazil's Cerrado becomes disfigured and less resilient to climate change:

 
Without proper management, Brazil's Cerrado becomes disfigured and less resilient to climate change - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 22 · The Cerrado, Brazil's savanna biome, is being destroyed at a fast pace, and inadequate management of remnants is transforming large areas of the biome into cerradão, a biodiversity-poor forest formation in which species typical of the Cerrado mingle with generalist species occupying gallery forest and other structures.
Scientists wonder whether areas of cerradão can conserve the biodiversity of the Cerrado. If not, they may evolve into a type of biodiverse forest similar to the Atlantic Rainforest biome, or they may become neither one nor the other.
A long-term study set out to find answers to these questions by investigating changes occurring over a ...
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World's oases threatened by desertification, even as humans expand them:

 
World's oases threatened by desertification, even as humans expand them - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 22 · "Although the scientific community has always emphasized the importance of oases, there has not been a clear map of the global distribution of oases," said Dongwei Gui, a geoscientist at the Chinese Academy of Science, who led the study. "Oasis research has both theoretical and practical significance for achieving United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and promoting sustainable development in arid regions."
The study found that oases around the world grew by more than 220,149 square kilometers (85,000 square miles) from 1995 to 2020, mostly due to intentional oasis expansion projects in Asia. But desertification drove the loss of 134,300 square kilometers (51,854 square ...
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Your most pressing climate questions:

 
Your most pressing climate questions - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 23 · Subscriber-only Newsletter
Climate Forward
Introducing Ask NYT Climate, where we’ll explore how climate intersects with your everyday life.
I’m the new editor of the Climate Forward newsletter.
Are traffic circles better for the environment than four-way stops? Will the oceans be too hot for fish to survive? Is green hydrogen a thing?
Over the past few years, we here at the Climate desk have received hundreds of smart, often highly specific, questions from our readers about what they can do in their daily lives to affect climate change. To answer some of these questions, this week we’ve launched “Ask NYT Climate,” which is dedicated to exploring how ...
| By Ryan McCarthy    Read more ...
 

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