New York residents say a hazardous waste incinerator’s emissions violate their new constitutional right to a “healthful environment.” pollution.air Article 2087 words, published Nov 9 2023 14 votes
New system could produce freshwater from saltwater more cheaply than how tap water is made water.fresh water.drinking Article 1169 words, published Sep 26 2023 29 votes
Zero-electricity floating desalination machines powered by waves water.fresh water.drinking Article 669 words 19 votes
Wind farms are building datacenters to offload electricity in non-peak hours energy.renewable Video 12:11 16 votes
Copenhagen is moving away from concrete and asphalt and towards softer, “spongier” settlements that work with the natural flow of the water cycle climate change Video 10:53, published Oct 20 2023 8 votes
Estonia-Finland pipeline explosion – what's the evidence that the damage was deliberate? energy Article 917 words 13 votes
The world has already crossed a ‘tipping point’ [of the good kind] on solar power energy.renewable Article 77 words 20 votes
NATO will discuss damage to gas pipeline running between Finland and Estonia – will mount a determined response if a deliberate attack is proven energy Article 534 words 11 votes
As rooftop solar debate flares, builders, landlords and renter advocates are taking sides energy.renewable Article 1769 words 15 votes
Vermont utility plans to end outages by giving customers batteries energy Article 1256 words 14 votes
The largest dam removal in history stirs hopes of restoring California tribes' way of life Article 2488 words, published Oct 5 2023 19 votes
Baltic Sea gas pipeline between Finland and Estonia is shut down over a suspected leak energy Article 439 words 9 votes
Desalination system could produce freshwater that is cheaper than tap water water.fresh water.drinking Article 1140 words, published Sep 27 2023 26 votes
Global demand for drinkable water is on the rise – Norwegian company Waterise is responding by desalinating the sea into clean, drinkable water water.salt water.drinking Article 479 words 9 votes
New Orleans officials seek to build a freshwater pipeline as saltwater wedge inches closer water.fresh water.salt Article published Sep 27 2023 11 votes
‘We can’t drink oil’: How a seventy-year-old pipeline imperils the Great Lakes water energy Article 2281 words 31 votes
What is saltwater intrusion and how is it affecting Louisiana’s drinking water? water.salt water.drinking Article 717 words 17 votes
Nigerian power grid in ‘total system collapse’. Generation falls to zero, with blackouts across most of Africa’s largest economy energy Link 20 votes
US extremists keep trying to trigger mass blackouts — and that’s not even the scariest part energy Article 2041 words, published Sep 10 2023 29 votes
Why investing in new nuclear plants is bad for the climate energy.renewable climate change Link 32 votes
Toyota takes its biggest US port off the grid with hydrogen system energy.renewable Article 481 words, published Sep 7 2023 35 votes
As US hydrogen projects accelerate, fears mount about environmental impacts Article 1178 words, published Aug 31 2023 10 votes
Saudi Arabia moves ahead with its largest solar power project energy.renewable Article 410 words 14 votes
Taliban bringing water to Afghanistan’s parched plains via massive canal climate change Article 1392 words 32 votes
Despite years of Maui wildfire warnings, Hawaii Electric the Hawaii utility giant did little and spent more on lobbying than prevention Article 1295 words 27 votes
US federal grants will replace tunnels beneath roads that let water pass but not fish Article 582 words 16 votes
Power lines likely caused Maui’s first reported fire, video and data show Article 2076 words 11 votes
As work begins on the largest US dam removal project, tribes look to a future of growth Article 1155 words, published Jul 31 2023 28 votes
Solar panels on water canals seem like a no-brainer. So why aren’t they widespread? water energy.renewable Article 1145 words 32 votes
The first US nuclear reactor built from scratch in decades enters commercial operation in Georgia energy Article 796 words 64 votes
Germany's MAN Energy Solutions installs world's largest seawater CO2 heat pump for district heating at the port of Esbjerg, Denmark water.sea energy.renewable Article 292 words, published Jun 6 2023 7 votes
Viking Link joins UK and Denmark power grids for first time – 765km high-voltage cable joins Bicker Fen in Lincolnshire with Jutland in Denmark energy.renewable Article 42 words 10 votes
Solar power proves its worth as heat wave grips Texas energy.renewable Article 1178 words, published Jun 28 2023 15 votes
Renewables are the only reason Texas' power grid hasn't failed during this month's punishing heat wave climate change energy.renewable Article 1089 words 19 votes
Heat and smoke are smothering most of the US, putting lives at risk pollution.air Article 873 words 14 votes
Controversy over lack of renewable in plans to rebuild electrical grid in Puerto Rico energy.renewable Article 1084 words 10 votes
What the hell happened to the California of the ’50s and ’60s? Article 1757 words, published Jun 18 2023 12 votes
Harnessing Iceland's geothermal energy for agriculture | Focus on Europe energy.renewable Video 3:34 2 votes
Finland is on the verge of becoming the first nation to bury spent nuclear fuel rods deep underground for the long term energy Article 2756 words 12 votes
The Huussi toilet in Finland's pavilion at the 2023 Venice Architecture Biennale disposes of waste without any water sustainability Article 7 votes
Finland's vast network of tunnels 400m underground will soon begin operating as the world's first spent nuclear fuel disposal facility energy Video 2:21 9 votes
Plant Vogtle Unit 3 nuclear reactor reaches initial criticality climate change energy Article 635 words 14 votes
Project to store carbon dioxide 1,800 metres beneath the North Sea – Denmark is the first country in the world to bury CO2 imported from abroad climate change Article 722 words 5 votes