Showing results for: Climate Change (page 58)
An unexpected source of methane? Your local sewage plant
Siri Chilukuri
A new study says the plants emit twice as much methane as previously thought
The fungus from “The Last of Us” is being used as a natural pesticide
Troy Farah
Forget zombies – using this type of cordyceps could be a potent, all-natural alternative to toxic chemicals
How Washington raised $300 million for climate action from polluters
Kate Yoder
The state's first "cap-and-invest" auction nearly doubled the price of carbon recently sold in California
“The country is watching”: California homeless crisis looms as Gov. Newsom eyes political future
Angela Hart
As Newsom enters his second term, his legacy as governor hinges on his making headway on the homeless crisis
Salon’s totally (possibly) infallible Oscar predictions: Who will win? And who should win?
Russell Root
A handy guide for filling out your Oscars pool – and now you just need to worry about what apps to serve Sunday
Could we all be buying lab-grown meat soon?
Ryan Nebeker
We may soon enter a new era of "meat" . . . but what exactly does this mean?
New Zealand wants to tax cow burps (yes, you read that correctly)
Kevin Trenberth
The idea behind the unconventional concept has to do with mitigating climate change
Fungi in flour can cause lots of ailments — but nothing like what happens in HBO’s “The Last of Us”
Sheryl Barringer
While the outbreaks in the show are decisively fictional, there is something to be said about contaminated flour
UN reaches historic agreement to protect the world’s oceans
Zoya Teirstein
The treaty, if ratified, will establish a new set of rules aimed at conserving marine species and ecosystems
An Alabama clean water fund discriminated against Black communities, complaint alleges
Siri Chilukuri
The state is accused of making access to federal dollars so hard that the people who needed it most got nothing
Greenland’s marine ecosystem is experiencing a radical ‘regime change’
Avery Schuyler Nunn
Warming seas and dwindling sea ice are bringing new species to Arctic waters
H5N1 is infecting millions of animals. If it crosses over to humans, it will be worse than COVID
Troy Farah
Experts are on pins and needles over an avian virus called H5N1 that has killed 53% of the humans it infected
The Alex Murdaugh verdict matters: No shame in being fascinated by this true crime
Amanda Marcotte
Can privileged criminals face consequences? The Murdaugh murder trial speaks to anxieties fueling current tensions
Despite record-breaking snow and rain, California is still in a drought. Here’s why
Nicole Karlis
Record-setting snow in LA doesn't mean the state has recovered from its historic drought yet
How Alaska’s coastal communities are racing against erosion
Saima Sidik
"There's a lot of history being washed away"
Margaret Cho’s message to drag show haters: “Take equal rights like a man”
Mary Elizabeth Williams
On "Salon Talks," the queer icon addresses male comics, being a crazy cat lady and her hopes for "Fire Island 2"
Why North Dakota is preparing to sue Minnesota over clean energy
Zoya Teirstein
Interstate feuds threaten to make getting regional power grids off fossil fuels even more complicated
This year, skyrocketing food prices could lead to up to 1 million additional deaths
Peter Alexander
"This could be the end of an era of cheap food"
California’s rare flowering “superbloom” at risk of being trampled to oblivion by unruly tourists
Troy Farah
California's floral ecosystems can't handle a mob of tourists seeking that Instagram-perfect field of flowers
Walmart, Target, Home Depot lead pack of retailers emitting millions of pounds of CO2 via shipping
Joseph Winters
Eighteen U.S. companies’ cargo ships are causing an "onslaught of pollution,” report finds.
“Take yourself to the ocean”: “Blueback” star Radha Mitchell on how to care about the environment
Gary M. Kramer
Radha Mitchell spoke to Salon about her aquatic "Blueback" costar, doing her own diving and a dream about a dolphin
Insects are vanishing worldwide – making it harder to grow food
Stuart Reynolds
"Our insect friends are being crowded out. Somehow, we must find ways to make more room for them."
What is spillover? Bird flu outbreak underscores need for early detection
Treana Mayer
Wild birds like pelicans and ducks are dying from a new strain of avian influenza that has spread to farm animals
Report: World’s fossil fuel subsidies surged to $1 trillion after Ukraine invasion
Jake Bittle
European Union countries spent big to fight rising costs
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