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12 votes
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The intractable puzzle of growth
12 votes -
Looking for alternatives to flying, Matilda Welin decided to embark on a long-distance cycle from London to Sweden. Here's what she learned.
6 votes -
What works: Groundbreaking evaluation of climate policy measures over two decades
22 votes -
A voyage like no other, from Norway to Canada through the Northwest Passage – to raise awareness of the six planetary tipping points in the Arctic
7 votes -
I met the activists getting arrested for fighting fossil fuels
20 votes -
While southern Europe swelters, Denmark's mild temperatures and extended daylight hours are providing the perfect summer escape for many
8 votes -
Try Guys try firefighting
6 votes -
Léna Lazare is the new face of climate activism—and she's carrying a pickax
26 votes -
Sweden has cut 80% of its net emissions since 1990 – while growing its economy twofold. How have they done it?
31 votes -
The ghosts of the Green Sahara
7 votes -
A melting Alaska glacier keeps inundating Juneau
19 votes -
Hidden water reserve twice the size of Loch Ness discovered in drought-stricken Sicily
10 votes -
Impacts Project
8 votes -
‘Morally, nobody’s against it’: Brazil’s radical plan to tax global super-rich to tackle climate crisis
61 votes -
Citing climate change, a federal court in Brazil halts rainforest highway paving
20 votes -
Climate hero or villain? As it rapidly adopts clean technologies while drilling furiously for oil and gas, Norway is a paradox.
11 votes -
Monday breaks the record for the hottest day ever on Earth
52 votes -
What it's like to live in a Californian tourist attraction being swallowed by the sea
17 votes -
With CO2 levels rising, world’s drylands are turning green
9 votes -
Hurricane Beryl setting alarming records
25 votes -
US congressional testimony on the impact of climate-related disasters on the solvency of homeowner's insurance
18 votes -
New NOAA heat severity classification system for heat-related impacts on people (similar to hurricanes)
24 votes -
The US Department of Agriculture’s gardening zones shifted. This map shows you what’s changed in vivid detail.
32 votes -
Denmark will introduce a levy on farm emissions in what is set to be one of the world's first carbon taxes on agriculture
26 votes -
More than 550 hajj pilgrims die in Mecca as temperatures exceed 50C
44 votes -
This impossibly thin fabric could cool you down by sixteen-plus degrees
19 votes -
Russia’s war with Ukraine accelerating global climate emergency, report shows
13 votes -
Nearly half of journalists covering climate crisis globally received threats for their work
52 votes -
Research on Earth’s raging fever of 2023-24 is picking up
9 votes -
Giant viruses discovered on Greenland ice sheet could reduce ice melt by feeding on the snow algae which diminish ability of ice to reflect the sun
10 votes -
Deaths mount and water rationed as India faces record heat
43 votes -
Panama prepares to evacuate first island in face of rising sea levels
37 votes -
Dengue fever spreading to new countries, including the US due to climate change, among other factors
7 votes -
Carbon pricing works, meta-review finds
17 votes -
Alaskan rivers are turning orange
14 votes -
Fast-rising seas could swamp septic systems in parts of the American South
7 votes -
EU's Green Deal improved its climate performance: a 1.5°C pathway is close
17 votes -
Why these giant oak barrels are the key to making some of the world's most expensive wine
10 votes -
New GPS-based method can measure daily ice loss in Greenland
6 votes -
Exxon Mobil is suing its shareholders to silence them about global warming
33 votes -
Landmark UK study definitively shows that conservation actions are effective at halting and reversing biodiversity loss
17 votes -
I gave up meat and gained so much more | A tale of one person's life, culture, and growing up
38 votes -
New rules to overhaul US electric grids could boost wind and solar power
9 votes -
At least 147 dead in monumental flood in Brazil. 127 missing.
25 votes -
‘Hopeless and broken’: why the world’s top climate scientists are in despair
63 votes -
Powering homes with PVT energy, Stirling engines, battery storage
5 votes -
A big new facility built to take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere opened up in Iceland. It's a stepping stone to bigger plans in the US.
30 votes -
Spring gardening thread
For those who live in the Northern Hemisphere, this is an open thread to discuss 2024 plans and ambitions now that cold temperatures are waning. I'll start off: I'm taking a risk, but got my...
For those who live in the Northern Hemisphere, this is an open thread to discuss 2024 plans and ambitions now that cold temperatures are waning.
I'll start off:
I'm taking a risk, but got my seedlings planted out yesterday. Officially, last frost date is May 16, but the rate of warming at 45° N has been so accelerated that we've got about 6 more frost-free weeks than in 2000.
My indoor seed starting wasn't as successful as usual for hot peppers, so I'll probably be buying plants. The tomatoes did fine, so much so that they were overgrowing their pots and the grow tent.
Unfortunately, goutweed invaded a couple of beds and I'm just going to have to tarp them until next year. That miserable weed will grow upwards through a foot-deep bed and there's no way to dig it out. Future beds (hoping to build another two or three this year) will be started on landscape fabric, lesson learned.
Spouse finished digging out the last of an invasive autumn olive hedge at the neighbor's fence line. We're deciding on Amelanchier (serviceberry) or aronia for replacement. Each has edible berries, it's just a choice between prettier flowers or bright fall foliage. There's a local native nursery with good prices on both.
We're also looking at replacing a badly placed non-native mulberry with a flowering crabapple. There are varieties that have both attractive flowers and good-tasting or cider-friendly fruit.
Please share your garden plans, including how you're factoring in climate variations.
19 votes -
Big data reveals true climate impact of worldwide air travel
24 votes