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8 votes
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In Iceland, a memorial ceremony for the Okjökull glacier suggests new ways to think about climate change
4 votes -
Andrew Yang's plan to tackle climate change
10 votes -
Andrew Yang at the CNN Climate Crisis Town Hall
2 votes -
In face of rising sea levels the Netherlands ‘must consider controlled withdrawal’
10 votes -
Facing unbearable heat, Qatar has begun to air-condition the outdoors
21 votes -
We can save the Arctic if we follow the Nordic countries' lead
5 votes -
Sweden's indigenous Sámi people threatened by climate change – global warming is putting the lifestyles of Arctic indigenous people under threat
7 votes -
How the women of Standing Rock are building sovereign economies
7 votes -
Land without bread: The Green New Deal forsakes America’s countryside
9 votes -
Meet the satellites that can pinpoint methane and carbon dioxide leaks
8 votes -
A worst-possible wildfire scenario for Southern California
8 votes -
Half a century of dither and denial – a climate crisis timeline
4 votes -
Sea 'boiling' with methane discovered in Siberia: 'No one has ever recorded anything like this before'
22 votes -
Revealed: the 20 firms behind a third of all carbon emissions
8 votes -
What we eat matters: To change climate crisis, we need to reshape the food system
6 votes -
The strange, uncertain fate of one of the world’s most valuable salmon habitats
5 votes -
"We are in a war zone against this disease.” Climate change is fueling fire blight, and Northern Michigan’s apple orchards are at risk
4 votes -
India isn’t letting a single onion leave the country
9 votes -
Moving rocks by hand, Colorado volunteers strengthen eroding landscapes to help withstand climate change
7 votes -
Any ex-climate deniers/skeptics here?
We've all seen it all over the news in recent years (decades, for those of who've been around long enough) ... people who are originally pretty sure they're right about something, tend to...
We've all seen it all over the news in recent years (decades, for those of who've been around long enough) ... people who are originally pretty sure they're right about something, tend to "double-down" on their convictions in the face of convincing evidence to the contrary ... and then double-down again.
Admitting you're wrong about something important, when you were pretty sure you were right, is just effin' hard.
Anybody here used to think climate change was a crock? What changed your mind?
15 votes -
Norway's massive wealth fund got the go-ahead to sell oil and gas stocks worth $5.9 billion
8 votes -
The schools where meat is off the menu for climate reasons
8 votes -
Special report on the ocean and cryosphere in a changing climate - Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
5 votes -
Greta Thunberg to world leaders: 'How dare you – you have stolen my dreams and my childhood'
23 votes -
How cities reshape the evolutionary path of urban wildlife
9 votes -
Climate change: Impacts 'accelerating' as leaders gather for UN talks
10 votes -
'Terrifying' New Climate Models Warn of 6-7°C of Warming by 2100 If Emissions Not Slashed
20 votes -
Andrew Yang Speaks at MSNBC’s Climate Forum 2020 - 9/19/19
8 votes -
Global climate strike sees thousands join children in Australian climate rallies
11 votes -
Amazon will order 100,000 electric delivery vans from electric vehicle startup Rivian, Jeff Bezos says
6 votes -
The blood-dimmed tide - Climate change is poised to alter the face of global conflict
4 votes -
What would a climate crisis doomsday bunker need?
I have been thinking recently, if a climate crisis is almost inevitable at this point what actions could an individual take to stay safe? I'm thinking some kind of underground bunker able to to...
I have been thinking recently, if a climate crisis is almost inevitable at this point what actions could an individual take to stay safe? I'm thinking some kind of underground bunker able to to sustain life. The main things you would need is power, water and food. The power is fairly simple since you could set up solar and wind generation and probably use that to grow food underground but I'm wondering what you would do for water. How possible would it be to collect barrels from the sea and have a personal desalination plant.
10 votes -
The tiny algae at ground zero of Greenland's melting glaciers
6 votes -
What can a software developer do about climate change?
22 votes -
2019 Ambassador of Conscience Award – Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg has been honored by Amnesty International USA
5 votes -
On whose green Earth?
6 votes -
Why I’m no longer traveling for conferences
16 votes -
How the Greenland ice sheet fared in 2019
7 votes -
Swedish mountain loses highest peak title due to global heating – glacier at Kebnekaise's summit has shrunk amid soaring Arctic temperatures
4 votes -
Emily Atkin's summary of and thoughts about CNN's 7-hour Climate Crisis Town Hall
10 votes -
Norway's bold plan to tackle overtourism and climate change at the same time
9 votes -
Senator Warren's climate change plan: 100% clean energy for America
11 votes -
Reducing your own carbon footprint is great, but it won’t save the planet unless governments and corporations step up
19 votes -
The country disappearing under rising tides
4 votes -
Norway Sámi community fights for survival as temperatures rise
6 votes -
To Fix the Climate, Tell Better Stories: The missing climate change narrative
6 votes -
The Kochtopus’s garden
9 votes -
Andrew Yang’s plan to tackle climate change, explained
23 votes -
Climate change plans need to account for the manufacturing of materials like steel, cement, plastic, glass, aluminum, and paper
10 votes