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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 35)

Colombia calls for aid as forest fires fueled by climate change destroy more than 42,000 acres

Rae Hodge
President declares national emergency, calling on UN and EU for aid while some report arson is partially to blame

If the multiverse theory is real, how soon can I ditch this sucky timeline?

Carlyn Zwarenstein
Unsurprisingly, pop culture gets the multiverse wrong. Here's how it really works and how to escape this place

Hot? Hungry? Step inside these food forests

Max Graham
"The good news is there’s a simple way to cool things down: plant trees"

Trawling for trouble: How fishing along the seafloor significantly worsens climate change

Matthew Rozsa
One of the least discussed factors of global heating is trawling the seafloor. It's also one of the easiest to stop

So much for moving to Europe: Trump’s allies are plotting an EU takeover

John Feffer
Conflict over immigration and Ukraine could tear the EU apart — and the far right is poised for a power grab

Seagulls are moving more into urban areas — risking an outbreak of bird flu

Matthew Rozsa
Seagulls are notoriously pesky about seeking human food — but bird flu exposure poses a public health threat

“Stop this madness”: Alaska Airlines’ Boeing 737 MAX door plug blowout follows a trail of negligence

Brian A. Barsky
The FAA endangered the safety of the flying public with its lack of oversight of Boeing

Canada lags behind on efforts to address human rights abuses in seafood supply chains

Peter Vandergeest, Carli Melo, Melissa Marschke
"Canada is falling behind in addressing labor abuse and sustainability in seafood supply chains"

PETA suggests new Groundhog Day tradition — replacing Punxsutawney Phil with a coin

Kelly McClure
"He is not a meteorologist and deserves better," the animal rights organization writes in a group letter

Groundwater resources are drying up across the globe. New research suggests we can fight the drip

Matthew Rozsa
A new study reveals that groundwater levels, though at dangerously low levels, can be replenished

Meat and dairy industry giants hold the plant power behind many vegan brands

Benjamin Selwyn
"At present, meat and dairy producers are supported by mega state subsidies"

“It’s not game over – it’s game on”: why 2024 is an inflection point for the climate crisis

Wesley Morgan
The accelerating shift toward clean energy technologies means global greenhouse gas emissions may fall in 2024

Veganuary: four surprising perks of a plant-based diet

Jack Marley
"These health benefits increase as people eat fewer animal products"

Stewards of the kelp forests: New research reveals how sea otters dramatically influence the climate

Matthew Rozsa
Otters help garden carbon-absorbing forests that protect coastlines. But they're vulnerable to climate change too

Weather underground: What caves can reveal about climate change, both past and future

Matthew Rozsa
Climate change doesn't just affect above-ground ecosystems. A new study illuminates the damage below our feet

Is America like the Soviet Union in 1990? It sometimes feels that way

Jackson Diianni
America's symptoms of decline are everywhere — and history tells us what happens if we don't change course

“Democrat shenanigans”: Experts alarmed as MAGA fans cry “fraud” in Iowa — despite Trump’s huge win

Areeba Shah
“‘Democracy’ as we’ve experienced it is at risk,” professor warns

How to build renewables without threatening biodiversity? Carefully

Max Graham
Researchers say coupling wind and solar farms with actual farms is a good place to start

Prison food is a national crisis. Sustainable sourcing could be a solution

C. Dreams
". . . Nourishing incarcerated individuals . . . isn’t just about filling their stomachs"

A rye renaissance is coming

Liz Susman Karp
The many reasons to love the grain — beyond just how delicious it is

Are disruptive climate protests working? Activists explain the motivation behind flashy dissent

Matthew Rozsa
Blocking traffic, "attacking" art — are these tactics helping the climate movement or just annoying?

MLK’s dream fulfilled: Why the labor movement is suddenly surging

Arnulfo De La Cruz
Racial and economic justice are inherently intertwined -- and you can't have either without organized labor

Reactionary centrism: The toxic force that could elect Trump — and kill off democracy

Paul Rosenberg
Supposedly fair-minded moderates who demonize the left are poisoning our politics — and only helping the Orange Man

“Really personal”: Billionaire targets MIT after Harvard plagiarism crusade backfires on his wife

Tatyana Tandanpolie
"It certainly appears that the focus was never really about antisemitism and protecting students," scholar says
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