Women’s Rugby World Cup to be Powered by Sustainable Energy
Happy Eco News Women’s Rugby World Cup to be Powered by Sustainable Energy Reading Time: 2 minutes Women’s Rugby World Cup to be Powered by Sustainable Energy The Women’s Rugby World
Happy Eco News Women’s Rugby World Cup to be Powered by Sustainable Energy Reading Time: 2 minutes Women’s Rugby World Cup to be Powered by Sustainable Energy The Women’s Rugby World
How sensitively does organic carbon stored in soils react to changes in temperature and humidity? This question is central to a new study now published in Nature Communications.
Global recycling rates are failing to keep pace with a culture focused on infinite economic growth and consumerism, with the proportion of recycled materials re-entering supply chains falling for the eighth
Mountain guide Eduardo Mostazo was born and raised in Cáceres, a small city in southwest Spain close to Portugal, which has suffered a rural exodus. Now it faces a new threat:
This story was produced in partnership with the Pulitzer Center’s Ocean Reporting Network.Rachel Feltman: For Scientific American’s Science Quickly, I’m Rachel Feltman.You don’t have to pay much attention to the news
Happy Eco News A Case for ESG Metrics Linked to Compensation Reading Time: 4 minutes US companies face increasing pressure to adopt ESG metrics linked to compensation as Asian markets demonstrate
A group of influential MPs has urged the government to delay controversial planned changes to inheritance tax for farmers to “allow for better formulation of tax policy” and to protect vulnerable
What does a climate-neutral, livable city look like—and what concrete actions can help us get there? The new Climate Action Navigator (CAN) from HeiGIT (Heidelberg Institute for Geoinformation Technology) offers data-driven
Warming in the Arctic is intensifying methane emissions, contributing to a vicious feedback loop that could accelerate climate change even more, according to a new study published in Nature.
It takes a lot of fuel to get an airplane up in the sky and keep it there—which means a lot of emissions. In fact, the airline industry produces more greenhouse