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32 votes
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Iran's president says capital must move from Tehran over ecological concerns
38 votes -
Letter to a Liberal member of Parliament
Dear Mr. Sawatzky, Both atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO₂) and temperature are increasing at an exponential rate, in lock-step. Atmospheric CO₂ levels during the Eocene have been estimated up to 840...
Dear Mr. Sawatzky,
Both atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO₂) and temperature are increasing at an exponential rate, in lock-step. Atmospheric CO₂ levels during the Eocene have been estimated up to 840 parts per million (ppm); sea levels were close to 60 metres higher than today. CO₂ concentrations are over 425 ppm and still climbing. Pause a moment to consider what this will mean for all coastal cities.
What part of “keep the oil in the ground” that scientists have been shouting for decades do politicians not understand? What part of physics are politicians trying to deny?
I am opposed to allowing more oil tankers near our beautiful, fragile coast. I am vehemently opposed to marring our landscape with pipelines for transporting oil. Yes, $14 trillion dollars is a lot of money, but it will pale in comparison to the economic damage that exacerbating climate change will cause. Carbon capture and storage cannot offset our burn rate with any significance.
Earth has had a remarkably stable climate for tens of thousands of years; burning fossil fuels is destabilizing it.
I ask you to acknowledge that physics cannot be bargained with, show some foresight, protect our children's future, and care deeply about our planet's health. I ask that you tell our Prime Minister in no uncertain terms that selling fossil fuels is the wrong choice for the world and the wrong economic direction for Canada.
12 votes -
United Kingdom electric vehicle owners to face pay-per-mile tax
15 votes -
How Iran is running out of water
11 votes -
Letters from an American November 26, 2025 - The historical origin of the US Federal Thanksgiving holiday
13 votes -
How right-wing superstar Riley Gaines built an anti-trans empire
21 votes -
EU countries must mutually recognise same-sex marriages, European Court of Justice rules
28 votes -
As the war in Ukraine rages on, many Finns are getting reacquainted with the country's remarkable network of väestönsuoja, or civil defense shelters
24 votes -
As US-based company Lyten prepares to restart battery production, Northvolt's downfall has cast a chill over Sweden's ambitions to reindustrialize around clean technology
9 votes -
Donald Trump pushing Paramount to make Rush Hour 4
18 votes -
Russians confront wartime internet cuts with public shrug, private fury
38 votes -
Reselling tickets for profit to be outlawed in UK government crackdown
36 votes -
Keira is one of many Greenlandic families living on the Danish mainland who are fighting to get their children returned to them after they were removed by social services
14 votes -
Denmark's climate minister, Lars Aagaard, announced that his government would submit a binding target to cut emissions by 82% by 2035 compared with 1990 levels
10 votes -
US Federal Communications Commission chairman reposts Donald Trump's call for NBC to fire Seth Meyers
25 votes -
New York City Council pushes to legalize bodega cats, giving them ‘purr-fect’ legal status
34 votes -
Pennies are being canceled and the US Mint won't make any more. What does that mean?
44 votes -
Disrupting the first reported AI-orchestrated cyber espionage campaign
16 votes -
Denmark's drive to conscript teenage girls – as the threat from Russia increases, it is no longer only young men who are being called to serve
20 votes -
100 years of menus shows how food and diplomacy are linked
14 votes -
How Norway jeopardised its integrity overnight – Oslo abruptly changed the ethics rules for the world's largest sovereign wealth fund
11 votes -
Britain gives go-ahead to smaller nuclear reactor in Wales
10 votes -
US Supreme Court denies Kim Davis' petition to revisit same-sex marriage ruling
30 votes -
Libertarianism is dead
36 votes -
Swedish parliament votes to allow uranium mining – now classed as a concession mineral, especially useful for society
12 votes -
How generations of meddlesome public health campaigns changed everyday life — and made life twice as long as it used to be
9 votes -
CNN White House correspondent Kaitlan Collins reviews news scenes in movies and TV
6 votes -
How nuclear power ambitions aim to wean Finland off Russian energy – nuclear share in electricity production went from 28% in 2022 to 39% in 2025
15 votes -
Denmark is facing one of the largest legal bills in English legal history, running into hundreds of millions of pounds, after the country lost a high-stakes tax fraud case in London
16 votes -
Iceland's glaciers and the disappearance of a frozen world – ‘last chance tourism’ brings economic benefits but puts pressure on local communities in an increasingly fragile landscape
7 votes -
Danish government has reached an agreement to implement a minimum age requirement of fifteen years old on certain social media platforms
12 votes -
EU country grouping cleared to build sovereign digital infrastructure
33 votes -
US Federal Aviation Administration reducing air traffic by 10% across forty ‘high-volume’ markets during government shutdown
51 votes -
The cost of borrowing divides rich towns from poor ones
14 votes -
Pilot scheme where students eat nutritious breakfasts using donated surplus food builds on the ‘folkhem’ welfare model to boost health and sustainability in Sweden
12 votes -
Denmark eyes new law to protect citizens from AI deepfakes – if enacted, Danes would get the copyright over their own likeness
21 votes -
Anthropic to bring its AI to hundreds of teachers in Iceland with pilot scheme – aim of helping them with lesson planning, classroom materials, and administrative work
7 votes -
Donald Trump AI advisor David Sacks says ‘no federal bailout for AI’ after OpenAI CFO’s suggestion of US federal government backstop
31 votes -
As the US and the West races to break China's stranglehold over rare earths production, some firms are betting that Greenland will become a new mining frontier
6 votes -
Inside David Ellison’s dramatic first 100 days at Paramount: courting Tom Cruise blockbusters, forging ties with Donald Trump and daring anyone else to buy Warner Bros. Discovery
6 votes -
Why Disney ditched ‘Doctor Who’
25 votes -
Could invisible fences be the future of livestock farming – Sweden and Denmark will soon legalise virtual fencing. What is it and is it safe?
10 votes -
The Icelandic women's strike fifty years on – despite closing the gender pay gap by 90%, the nation is ‘still no paradise’ for women, say campaigners
12 votes -
European Court of Human Rights has cleared Norway of violating its citizens' constitutional rights in a case dating back to the award of oil and gas exploration licences in 2016
9 votes -
Josef Průša awarded Medal for Merit by president of Czech Republic
15 votes -
Hamlet rages in Stockholm against political closure of a cultural institution – government funding freezes have resulted in a real terms decrease of £4M per year since 2017 for theatre Dramaten
6 votes -
In the early 1990s, Sweden faced one of the worst economic crises in its modern history – the lessons for other countries, especially France, deep in its own budget crisis, are simple, if not easy
21 votes -
Europe's animal welfare overhaul is on life support – Denmark's farm minister thinks he can still revive it, one compromise at a time
6 votes -
How industrial slaughter became the blueprint for modern capitalism
25 votes