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Experts urge unconventional solution to $21 billion US problem: 'More dynamic and pragmatic approaches'
It could be a win-win. Experts urge unconventional solution to $21 billion US problem: 'More dynamic and pragmatic approaches' first appeared on The Cool Down.
I think those seeking solutions to our current climate challenges can look to natural purifiers as one pathway to planetary ...
Enabling collaboration to monetize emissions is becoming increasingly attainable as researchers explore enhancing integration ...
Discover the true scale of the plastic pollution crisis and explore the latest breakthroughs in recycling and repurposing plastic waste. From fashion brands crafting apparel with recycled materials to ...
The seventh session of the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-7) concluded today with Member States delivering 11 resolutions, ...
Beside the murky waters off Pass Christian, shrimp boats docked in the distance, David Gautier is worried about a threat many miles away that he cannot control. Gautier, 64, runs a seafood business on ...
On December 19th, 2014, WWF-Azerbaijan in cooperation with Republican Center of Ecological Training and Experience of the Ministry of Education of Azerbaijan has organized the “Alarm Bell” exhibition ...
Cutting food waste is a huge potential climate win. Why are we ignoring it? In the United States, climate change is polarizing, but one environmental challenge draws rare bipartisan agreement: food ...
Microplastics seem to be everywhere—in the air we breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat. They have turned up in human organs, blood, testicles, placentas and even brains. While the full health ...
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Volunteers at Little Blue River are facing an ongoing battle with illegal tire dumping, which poses significant health and environmental risks. The accumulation of tires along this ...
When drought became a perennial visitor to the Beatty Canyon Ranch in Colorado in the late 1990s, Steve Wooten remembers telling his family, “We got to do something different.” Between 1997 and 2003, ...
We’re celebrating 180 years of Scientific American. Explore our legacy of discovery and look ahead to the future. In 1864 Scientific American published a competition launched by a billiard-table ...
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