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3 votes
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Alaska cancels snow crab season for first time after population collapses
16 votes -
Mississippi River levels are dropping too low for barges to float
3 votes -
This 100% solar community endured Hurricane Ian with no loss of power and minimal damage
12 votes -
Photos: Hurricane Ian leaves path of destruction
16 votes -
How San Francisco’s recycled water program stumbled into performative environmentalism
4 votes -
Why the American lawn really sucks
9 votes -
Patagonia founder gives away the company to fight climate change
26 votes -
California’s drought regulators lose big case. What it means for state’s power to police water
9 votes -
America has a rabid-raccoon problem
12 votes -
Alex Honnold just led the first ascent of one of Earth's tallest Arctic sea cliffs, gathering crucial climate data along the way
8 votes -
US climate law gives Clean Air Act a legal boost after court rebuke
9 votes -
Why the US Army electrifies this water
7 votes -
How NEPA works
4 votes -
Greenland is ground zero for the impacts of climate change, but it could also become ground zero for sourcing the metals needed to power the solution to the crisis
4 votes -
We can’t save the planet and make ExxonMobil happy
6 votes -
Leaked: US power companies secretly spending millions to protect profits and fight clean energy
21 votes -
The audacious PR plot that seeded doubt about climate change
8 votes -
In San Francisco’s salty South Bay, an ambitious wetlands restoration project is seeking to balance a return to the ecological past with the realities of a changing future
4 votes -
Solar power is bailing Texas out this summer
10 votes -
Rio Grande runs dry in Albuquerque for the first time in forty years
9 votes -
Beloved monarch butterflies now listed as endangered
27 votes -
Livestream of brown bears feeding during the salmon run at Brooks Falls, in Katmai National Park, Alaska
9 votes -
NASA scientists to study ice, snow and melt ponds in the Arctic Ocean during the warmer summer months to better understand melting sea ice
4 votes -
Single-use plastic waste is getting phased out in California under a sweeping new law
23 votes -
US Supreme Court curbs EPA's ability to fight climate change
29 votes -
How sand made from crushed glass rebuilds Louisiana’s shrinking coast | World Wide Waste
3 votes -
Carbon hacking: Least carbon-intensive traveling between US and Europe
My life is split between the US and the Netherlands, where I have friends and work in both places. I try to fly as little as possible: only one intercontinental flight per year. But even that puts...
My life is split between the US and the Netherlands, where I have friends and work in both places. I try to fly as little as possible: only one intercontinental flight per year. But even that puts my individual carbon footprint far above the average human's. I buy carbon offsets but that just shifts responsibility.
I've long been deeply inspired by Greta Thunberg's protest act of sailing from England to New York to attend a 2019 climate summit. But sailing across the ocean in a racing yacht with a crew simply is too extreme.
So I'm curious what are the options for reducing carbon emissions when traveling between continents.
I've contemplated hopping on a freighter ship. My thinking is that: freighter ships are extremely efficient cargo-weight-to-emission ratio-wise, so the marginal carbon emission of me as added 'cargo' must be much lower than as another passenger on an airplane. Plus, the freighter ship will be sailing with or without me on board; whereas as a plane passenger I enable the business of a passenger flight.
6 votes -
Canada’s boar war - Wild pigs are invasive, destructive and dangerous, and their populations in Canada are exploding out of control. How can we fight back?
12 votes -
Oil refineries are making a windfall. Why do they keep closing?
8 votes -
It’s Warren Buffett versus Google, Facebook in latest US wind-farm debate
6 votes -
California imposes sweeping ban on pumping river water in San Joaquin Valley, Bay Area
11 votes -
Why the Texas power grid is vulnerable to blackouts during winter storms and heat waves
12 votes -
Meet the retired oil exec plugging forgotten wells to reduce emissions | World Wide Waste
5 votes -
Nurdles: The massive, unregulated source of plastic pollution you’ve probably never heard of
10 votes -
Californian critics blast Poseidon desalination plan as crucial vote looms
4 votes -
BlocPower wants to evict fossil fuels one building at a time... And replace them with greener alternatives
5 votes -
Why did the US military dig a tunnel in the Alaskan tundra? What is the tunnel used for now?
5 votes -
'Unprecedented' water restrictions ordered for millions in Southern California
17 votes -
Climate activist Wynn Alan Bruce dies after setting himself on fire outside US Supreme Court on Earth Day
31 votes -
The absurd mystery of flamingo no. 492
4 votes -
The incredible logistics behind corn farming
9 votes -
California pumps too much groundwater, especially during droughts. Now, it's learning to refill the overdrawn bucket.
9 votes -
Maine’s disaster from PFAS-contaminated produce is causing farms to close and farmers to face the loss of their livelihoods
6 votes -
California’s solar market is now a battery market
12 votes -
The big semiconductor water problem
12 votes -
America produces enough oil to meet its needs, so why do we import crude?
4 votes -
These 23-year-old Texans made $4 million last year mining bitcoin off flare gas from oil drilling
12 votes -
How do you care for one of the world’s oldest aquarium fish?
4 votes -
The Gold Rush returns to California
4 votes