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8 votes
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What if American farmers had to pay for water?
41 votes -
Why a 100-year supply? How Arizona got its famous, yet arbitrarily numbered groundwater rule.
14 votes -
Imagining a reverse kibbutz
9 votes -
Ephemeral pools of Moab - The nature and creatures of water pan/potholes with retired USGS Scientist Tim Graham
7 votes -
Ethiopia's Nile dam [continues to] anger Egypt
7 votes -
Why is the Colorado River running dry?
15 votes -
‘Green roads’ are plowing ahead, buffering drought and floods
9 votes -
Companies knew the dangers of PFAS 'forever chemicals'—and kept them secret
58 votes -
Scientists have found a ‘sleeping giant’ of environmental problems: Earth is getting saltier
35 votes -
United Arab Emirates promises to build desalination plants for Gaza as part of humanitarian commitment 'Gallant Knight 3'
8 votes -
New system could produce freshwater from saltwater more cheaply than how tap water is made
29 votes -
Zero-electricity floating desalination machines powered by waves
19 votes -
Drought in Amazon Rainforest makes water level in Manaus sink to just thirteen meters, the lowest since records began
8 votes -
Desalination system could produce freshwater that is cheaper than tap water
26 votes -
California lawmakers move to ban irrigation of some decorative lawns
6 votes -
Global demand for drinkable water is on the rise – Norwegian company Waterise is responding by desalinating the sea into clean, drinkable water
9 votes -
Europe’s water crisis: How supplies turned to ‘gold dust’
9 votes -
US state of Arizona cancels leases and water rights for Saudi company that grows alfalfa
45 votes -
New Orleans officials seek to build a freshwater pipeline as saltwater wedge inches closer
11 votes -
Saltwater is pushing its way up the Mississippi River
22 votes -
Road hazard: Evidence mounts on toxic pollution from tires
30 votes -
‘We can’t drink oil’: How a seventy-year-old pipeline imperils the Great Lakes
31 votes -
What is saltwater intrusion and how is it affecting Louisiana’s drinking water?
17 votes -
Utah officials sued over failure to save Great Salt Lake: ‘Trying to avert disaster’
23 votes -
A mysterious murder in the peyote guardians’ sacred desert
6 votes -
How a Japanese-run wastewater treatment plant in Mexico shamelessly polluted until the site was shut down
7 votes -
“Mating glaciers to replace water lost to climate change”
14 votes -
America is using up its groundwater like there’s no tomorrow: Overuse is draining and damaging aquifers nationwide
48 votes -
The indigenous groups fighting against the quest for 'white gold' in South America
11 votes -
Fukushima contaminated water set to be released into the ocean
13 votes -
Taliban bringing water to Afghanistan’s parched plains via massive canal
32 votes -
A state official refused to release water for West Maui fires until it was too late
27 votes -
Recorded interview with Hawaiian indigenous community leader re the fires, ecology, climate change, water, history, politics, culture and current needs
13 votes -
Judge rules in favor of Oklahoma against big chicken producers in poultry-pollution lawsuit
17 votes -
Global mass of buoyant marine plastics dominated by large long-lived debris
6 votes -
Chemical companies’ PFAS payouts are huge – but the problem is even bigger
11 votes -
Greenland's largest glacial floating ice declined 42% due to global warming, scientists determine
16 votes -
Solar panels on water canals seem like a no-brainer. So why aren’t they widespread?
32 votes -
How “Big Ag” pollutes America’s water, and makes money doing it
13 votes -
How California’s weather catastrophe turned into a miracle
20 votes -
Ghost town disappears as California lake fills for first time in years
19 votes -
Germany's MAN Energy Solutions installs world's largest seawater CO2 heat pump for district heating at the port of Esbjerg, Denmark
7 votes -
‘An insane amount of water’: What climate change means for California’s biggest dairy district
14 votes -
Study says drinking water from nearly half of US faucets contains potentially harmful chemicals
49 votes -
Meltwater is hydro-fracking Greenland's ice sheet through millions of hairline cracks – destabilizing its internal structure
10 votes -
Interview with computer science professor Shaolei Ren about the environmental impact of artificial intelligence
https://themarkup.org/hello-world/2023/07/08/ai-environmental-equity-its-not-easy-being-green A few months ago, I spoke with Shaolei Ren, as associate professor of computer science at University...
https://themarkup.org/hello-world/2023/07/08/ai-environmental-equity-its-not-easy-being-green
A few months ago, I spoke with Shaolei Ren, as associate professor of computer science at University of California, Riverside, and his team about their research into the secret water footprint of AI. Recently, Ren and his team studied how AI’s environmental costs are often disproportionately higher in some regions than others, so I spoke with him again to dig into those findings.
His team, which includes UC Riverside Ph.D. candidates Pengfei Li and Jianyi Yang, and Adam Wierman, a professor in the Department of Computing and Mathematical Sciences (CMS) at the California Institute of Technology, looked into a path toward more equitable AI through what they call “geographical load balancing.” Specifically, this approach attempts to “explicitly address AI’s environmental impacts on the most disadvantaged regions.”
Ren and I talked about why it’s not easy being green and what tangible steps cloud service providers and app developers could take to reduce their environmental footprint.
4 votes -
Patagonia helps Samsung redesign washing machines to help reduce microfiber pollution
46 votes -
Spanish authorities are seeking €90 Million in damages from a Swedish mining company for a major toxic spill near the famed Doñana National Park in 1998
11 votes -
Highly radioactive spill near Columbia River in E. Washington worse than expected
50 votes