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Hot Topics
  • June 23, 2025 | A New Mall for The Village: How Carbon Credit Dollars Affect Indigenous People in Guyana
  • June 20, 2025 | Citizens and State at Odds Over Chile’s Rucalhue Dam
  • June 12, 2025 | How Volcanologists Can Improve Urban Climate Resilience
  • June 9, 2025 | An Effective and Impactful Project: Restoring Livelihoods in War-torn Tigray
  • May 29, 2025 | Analysis: 95% of Countries Miss UN Deadline to Submit 2035 Climate Pledges
  • May 28, 2025 | Landmark Moment for Berlin’s Heating Transition: BTB Bids Farewell to Coal
  • May 21, 2025 | Half the World’s People Depend on Rice. New Research Says Climate Change Will Make it Toxic
  • May 7, 2025 | Eight of the Top 10 Online Shows Are Spreading Climate Misinformation
  • April 30, 2025 | What Can Psychology Offer Biodiversity Protection?
  • April 23, 2025 | For Climate and Livelihoods, Africa Bets Big on Solar Mini-grids

Fossil Fuels, Natural Gas October 20, 2016

Why utilities have little incentive to plug leaking natural gas

The Aliso Canyon leak in California earlier this year focused public attention on methane emissions from the oil and gas industry. Methane is the primary…


Advanced Tech, Innovation October 17, 2016

LEDs, Not Solar, Have Transformed Their Industry

For all of the talk about the disruptive nature of wind and solar on the utility sector, there is another clean energy technology that has…


News & Comments, Policy & Strategy October 14, 2016

The Open Source School Redefines Education in Italy

Threading elements of the great educational experiments of Bauhaus and Roycroft Community models together with Pierre Levy’s modern definition of “collective intelligence,” La Scuola Open…


Nature & Environment, News & Comments October 12, 2016

UT Study Cracks Coldest Case: How the Most Famous Human Ancestor Died

Lucy, the most famous fossil of a human ancestor, probably died after falling from a tree, according to a study appearing in Nature led by…


Climate Change, Nature & Environment, News & Comments, Renewables October 10, 2016

How Billionaire Trump Is Missing Greener Pastures

How Billionaire Trump Is Missing Greener Pastures Considering how much he brags about his business acumen, shouldn’t Donald Trump do a better job of keeping…


CCS, Climate Change, News & Comments September 12, 2016

Scientists turn carbon dioxide back into fuel

As scientists and policymakers around the world try to combat the increasing rate of climate change, they have focused on the chief culprit: carbon dioxide….


Policy & Strategy September 9, 2016

In Win for Environment, Court Recognizes Social Cost of Carbon

If someone was tallying up all the benefits of energy efficiency programs, you’d want them to include reducing climate pollution, right? That’s just common sense….


Green Tech, Innovation September 5, 2016

“Holy Grail” of Renewable Energy Storage is Fast-Approaching

In 2009, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) created its Advanced Research Projects-Energy (ARPA-E) division to fund energy storage projects conducted by scientists at Harvard,…


Nature & Environment, News & Comments September 2, 2016

Planet Nine: A World That Shouldn’t Exist

Earlier this year scientists presented evidence for Planet Nine, a Neptune-mass planet in an elliptical orbit 10 times farther from our Sun than Pluto. Since…


Biomass, CCS, Innovation, News & Comments August 29, 2016

A Breakthrough Carbon-Capturing Algae Project

A research photobioreactor designed to capture significant amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) from power plant flue gas for high-density algae cultivation is showing promise. The…


Biofuels, Biomass, News & Comments August 25, 2016

Now is not the time to kiss the biofuels goodbye

The European Commission’s proposal to scrap the mandate for the use of biofuels and, in effect, to ‘kiss biofuels goodbye,’ is a catastrophic policy based…


Climate Change, News & Comments August 22, 2016

The ultimate disruptor is Mother Nature

The Paris Agreement to tackle global warming is bigger than most realise and may be the signal that the marketplace was waiting for to unleash…


Fossil Fuels, News & Comments, Oil August 19, 2016

Did Brexit Kill The Oil Price Rally?

Oil prices fell again on Monday after last week’s rout following the Brexit vote, deepening the losses and killing off a multi-month oil price rally….


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Last Issue

  • April-June 2025 (ONE)April-June 2025 (ONE)
Kaieteur Falls, Guyana. Photo credit: Dan Sloan (Flickr)

A New Mall for The Village: How Carbon Credit Dollars Affect Indigenous People in Guyana


Biobío River in the region of Lonquimay, Chile. Photo credit: Hermessolar (Wikimedia)

Citizens and State at Odds Over Chile’s Rucalhue Dam


Panorama of Portland, Oregon. Photo credit: King of Hearts (Wikimedia)

How Volcanologists Can Improve Urban Climate Resilience


Tigray village, Ethiopia, 2017. Photo credit: Rod Waddington (Wikimedia)

An Effective and Impactful Project: Restoring Livelihoods in War-torn Tigray


Temperature on a city screen in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Photo credit: Alex Rocha/PMPA (Wikimedia)

Analysis: 95% of Countries Miss UN Deadline to Submit 2035 Climate Pledges


Heating and cooling plant (Wikimedia)

Landmark Moment for Berlin’s Heating Transition: BTB Bids Farewell to Coal


White, Brown, Red & Wild rice. Photo credits: Earth100 (Wikimedia)

Half the World’s People Depend on Rice. New Research Says Climate Change Will Make it Toxic


Woman speaking into a microphone in front of a notebook.

Eight of the Top 10 Online Shows Are Spreading Climate Misinformation


Zebras in Lake Manyara National Park, Tanzania. Photo credit: Gaurav Pandit (Wikimedia)

What Can Psychology Offer Biodiversity Protection?


Off Grid: Electric mPower (Power Africa). Photo credits: USAID in Africa (Flickr)

For Climate and Livelihoods, Africa Bets Big on Solar Mini-grids


The Lost Bayou: Grand Bayou

Grand Bayou, LA. At one time, it was a lively community of close-knit families, until they were forced to leave. ©2020. Garde Voir Ci magazine. Nicholls State University Department of Mass Communication.
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World Rainforest Day

Rainforests cover only 2 percent of the planet’s surface area but are responsible for more than 25% of all Western medicine and house more than 50% of the world’s plant and animal species.
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Plastic litters one of the world's remotest islands - Henderson Island

Plastic litters one of the world's remotest islands - Henderson Island
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