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50 votes
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You're not crazy. The bugs are disappearing.
37 votes -
A rare “Polar Express” winter pattern is forecast over the United States and Canada, following a Polar Vortex split
38 votes -
Your "Yukon Gold" potatoes probably aren't Yukons—here's why
19 votes -
The secretive cabal of US polluters that is rewriting the EU’s human rights and climate law
14 votes -
Volcanic eruption may have triggered Europe's deadly Black Death plague
8 votes -
Collapse of critical Atlantic current is no longer low-likelihood, study finds
44 votes -
Iran's president says capital must move from Tehran over ecological concerns
39 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 -
How Iran is running out of water
11 votes -
Norwegian fisherman creates urban lodgings for gull species threatened by climate change, predators and avian flu in their natural habitats. It's booked out.
12 votes -
I joined a ‘sacrifice’ ritual outside Stockholm – and found that the revival of Norse paganism reflects broader battles over identity and climate anxiety
16 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 -
China’s CO2 emissions have been flat or falling for past eighteen months, analysis finds
41 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 -
How Bill Gates is reframing the climate change debate
34 votes -
Companies are crafting new ways to grow cocoa and chocolate alternatives
24 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 -
Mosquitoes have been found in Iceland for the first time as global heating makes the country more hospitable for insects
28 votes -
How soon will the seas rise?
11 votes -
Can we bury enough wood to slow climate change?
27 votes -
Shipping emissions mandate led to spike in global temperatures
18 votes -
America's dumbest crop: grass
52 votes -
Eliminating contrails from flying could be incredibly cheap
15 votes -
Earth is getting darker and it’s changing the planet’s climate balance
15 votes -
As traditional wine regions grapple with climate change and a decline in drinking, sales of domestic produce are surging in Sweden
12 votes -
Every summer, Spain's iconic Camino bakes under extreme heat – Norway's St Olav Ways offer pilgrims a quieter, cooler path to redemption
8 votes -
Hydropower, heat pumps and EVs made Norway a climate darling. Oil and gas exports made it rich. The paradox shaping this country's future – and the world's energy transition.
11 votes -
The country with Europe's most radical climate plan – an interview with Petteri Orpo, prime minister of Finland
15 votes -
‘Grue jay’ hybrid spotted in Texas
34 votes -
Stones have been ‘overfished’ from the sea – here's how Denmark's rocky reefs are being restored
7 votes