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View Type Title Content Summary Date Organization Info Details
View Article How La Niña will shape heat and hurricanes this year Climate change and the outgoing El Niño... 5/1/2024 VOX -Environment Info Details
View Article Amazon reports strong 1Q results driven by its cloud-computing unit... Amazon on Tuesday reported strong... 5/1/2024 PHYS.ORG - Technology Info Details
View Article April temperatures in Bangladesh hottest on record Bangladesh's weather bureau said... 5/1/2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth Info Details
View Article Drought That Snarled Panama Canal Was Linked to El Niño, Study Finds The low water levels that choked cargo... 5/1/2024 New York Times - Climate Section Info Details
View Article EU gifts companies a two-year delay on sustainability disclosures The delay grants companies more time... 5/1/2024 Greenbiz Info Details
View Article How climate policies can drive voters to the far right More than a decade ago, the Netherlands... 5/1/2024 Washington Post - Climate and Environment Info Details
View Article How to put corporate capital behind climate commitments The number of companies with... 5/1/2024 Greenbiz Info Details
View Article Study says El Nino, not climate change, was key driver of low rainfall... The climate phenomenon known as El Niño... 5/1/2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth Info Details
View Article What Biden's new power plant rules mean for utilities Utilities must comply with the EPA’s new... 5/1/2024 Greenbiz Info Details
View Article Five Things the “Nuclear Bros” Don’t Want You to Know About Small... Even casual followers of energy and... 4/30/2024 Union of Concerned Scientists - Energy Info Details
View Article New study looks at US Drought Monitor to see how it has reflected... Though generated by experts and informed... 4/30/2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth Info Details
View Article 'Bloodsicles', baths keep Philippine zoo animals cool as heat wave... A Philippine zoo is giving tigers frozen... 4/30/2024 PHYS.ORG - Biology Info Details
View Article 8 years into America's e-scooter experiment, what have we learned? Stay in the know about climate impacts... 4/30/2024 Yale Climate Connections - Transportation Info Details
View Article A rare and little-known group of monkeys could help save Africa's... At a time when hunting of wildlife and... 4/30/2024 PHYS.ORG - Biology Info Details
View Article A virus could help save billions of gallons of wastewater produced by... In a new study published in the journal... 4/30/2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth Info Details
View Article Abrupt permafrost thaw found to intensify warming effects on soil... According to a recent study published in... 4/30/2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth Info Details
View Article An AI model to reduce uncertainty in evapotranspiration prediction ET includes evaporation from soil and... 4/30/2024 PHYS.ORG - Biology Info Details
View Article At a glance - Clearing up misconceptions regarding 'hide the decline' On February 14, 2023 we announced our... 4/30/2024 Skeptical Science Info Details
View Article Atmospheric 'teleconnections' sustain warm blobs in the northeast... The first warm patch discovered in the... 4/30/2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth Info Details
View Article Believing environmental damage is done by others can cause 'race to... Common-pool resources, such as forests,... 4/30/2024 PHYS.ORG - Earth Info Details

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VOX -Environment

Climate change and the outgoing El Niño will likely ignite more weather extremes. The Pacific Ocean - Earth’s largest body of water - is an engine for weather around the planet, and it’s about to shift gears this year. The warm phase of the Pacific Ocean’s temperature cycle, known as El Niño, is...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Technology

Amazon reports strong 1Q results driven by its cloud-computing unit and Prime Video ad dollars

Amazon on Tuesday reported strong results for the first quarter, driven by growth in its cloud-computing unit and new advertising dollars from its Prime Video streaming service. The Seattle-based e-commerce giant said it brought in $143.31 billion in revenue in the first three months of this...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Earth

Bangladesh's weather bureau said Wednesday that last month was the hottest April on record, with the South Asian nation and much of the region still enduring a suffocating heat wave. Extensive scientific research has found climate change is causing heat waves to become longer, more frequent and...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

New York Times - Climate Section

The low water levels that choked cargo traffic were more closely tied to the natural climate cycle than to human-caused warming, a team of scientists has concluded. The recent drought in the Panama Canal was driven not by global warming but by below-normal rainfall linked to the natural climate...

Author:Raymond Zhong
Date Added:May 1, 2024

The delay grants companies more time before they’re expected to disclose ESG impacts and data under new reporting regulations. The delay gives more time to companies that must report sector-specific climate impacts. Source: wutzkohphoto via Shutterstock The European Council said on Tuesday that...

Author:Leah Garden
Date Added:May 1, 2024

Washington Post - Climate and Environment

More than a decade ago, the Netherlands embarked on a straightforward plan to cut carbon emissions. Its legislature raised taxes on natural gas, using the money earned to help Dutch households install solar panels. By most measures, the program worked: By 2022, 20 percent of homes in the...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

The number of companies with science-based emissions reduction goals grew 500 percent since 2018, but corporate finance supporting those goals is only increasing 5 percent annually. Investors are making it clear to companies: It’s time for them to put their capital behind their climate...

Author:Grant Harrison
Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Earth

Study says El Nino, not climate change, was key driver of low rainfall that snarled Panama Canal

The climate phenomenon known as El Niño - and not climate change - was a key driver in low rainfall that disrupted shipping at the Panama Canal last year, scientists said Wednesday. A team of international scientists found that El Niño - a natural warming of the central Pacific that changes...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

Utilities must comply with the EPA’s new emissions rules and invest in carbon capture and storage. A gas-powered electricity generating station in Arizona. Source: Shutterstock/James Mattil The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released new rules Thursday that require newly built natural gas...

Author:Leah Garden
Date Added:May 1, 2024

Union of Concerned Scientists - Energy

Five Things the “Nuclear Bros” Don’t Want You to Know About Small Modular Reactors

Even casual followers of energy and climate issues have probably heard about the alleged wonders of small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs). This is due in no small part to the “nuclear bros”: an active and seemingly tireless group of nuclear power advocates who dominate social media discussions...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Earth

New study looks at US Drought Monitor to see how it has reflected climate change since 2000

Though generated by experts and informed by data, it is in some ways a subjective interpretation of drought conditions. And it carries significant political and economic ramifications—the USDM informs state declarations of emergency, as well as drought relief payments issued by the U.S....

Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Biology

'Bloodsicles', baths keep Philippine zoo animals cool as heat wave hits

A Philippine zoo is giving tigers frozen treats made of animal blood and preventing lions from mating during the hottest time of the day as a heat wave scorches the country. Unusually hot weather has sent temperatures in the capital Manila to a record high in recent days and forced schools...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

Yale Climate Connections - Transportation

Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter. Yale Climate Connections When the sharing economy took off in the 2010s and upended entire industries, the firmest proponents of the model heralded it as an economic revolution that would help slash...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Biology

A rare and little-known group of monkeys could help save Africa's tropical forests

At a time when hunting of wildlife and habitat loss are driving long-term changes to ecosystems, including stark wildlife population declines and greater vulnerability to climate change and zoonotic disease transmission, the scientists identified red colobus monkeys as key indicators of tropical...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Earth

A virus could help save billions of gallons of wastewater produced by fracking

In a new study published in the journal Water, researchers at The University of Texas at El Paso have identified a novel means of treating the wastewater generated by oil and gas production: bacteriophages. Ramón Antonio Sánchez, a doctoral candidate within UTEP's chemistry...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Earth

Abrupt permafrost thaw found to intensify warming effects on soil CO₂ emission

According to a recent study published in Nature Geoscience, scientists have found that soil carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions are more sensitive to climate warming in permafrost-collapsed areas than in non-collapsed areas. This study, based on field warming experiments combined with laboratory...

Date Added:April 30, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Biology

ET includes evaporation from soil and open water pools such as lakes, rivers, and ponds, as well as transpiration from plant leaves. The difference between precipitation and ET indicates the water balance available for societal needs, including agricultural and industrial production. However,...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

Skeptical Science

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...

Date Added:April 30, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Earth

Atmospheric 'teleconnections' sustain warm blobs in the northeast Pacific Ocean

The first warm patch discovered in the northeast Pacific Ocean was the "Blob" event of 2013–2016, followed by another warm blob in 2019–2020. The Blob stretched from coastal Alaska to the Baja region of California, with sea surface temperatures as much as 6°C above normal. Vital...

Date Added:May 1, 2024

PHYS.ORG - Earth

Believing environmental damage is done by others can cause 'race to the bottom'

Common-pool resources, such as forests, fisheries, and groundwater, need to be managed effectively to reduce over-harvesting and environmental damage. Researchers knew that strong boundaries around a community's common-pool resource could promote effective management, but they weren't exactly...

Date Added:May 1, 2024