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31 votes
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Iceland plans to buy out home owners in volcano-struck town of Grindavík – total cost of the buyout could be as much as $440 million
20 votes -
Power companies are scrambling to satisfy the needs of data centers and new factories in the US
22 votes -
What one researcher learned studying grizzlies for nearly forty years
8 votes -
Border collies run like the wind to bring new life to Chilean forest after fire
16 votes -
Bioluminescent houseplant hits US market for first time
46 votes -
'Cliff-like' collapse of critical current system more likely than thought: study
28 votes -
Atlantic Ocean circulation nearing ‘devastating’ tipping point, study finds
45 votes -
Cheap electricity is luring Chinese Bitcoin miners to Ethiopia
7 votes -
Category 6 hurricanes have arrived
30 votes -
Scottish company Gravitricity is using the Pyhäjärvi mine in Finland to build its first full-scale prototype gravity energy store
14 votes -
US court bans three dicamba based weedkillers and finds EPA broke law in approval process
24 votes -
State of emergency has been declared in Iceland after lava from a volcanic eruption damaged key hot water pipes
22 votes -
New report shows that a crowded historic neighborhood suffered disproportionate casualties in Lahaina Hawaii fire
9 votes -
Attempts to plant new Joshua Trees after destructive fires assisted by load carrying camels
16 votes -
Hungry sea otters play a role in coastline protection
16 votes -
EU fossil fuel CO2 emissions hit sixty-year low
11 votes -
Over two percent of the US’s electricity generation now goes to bitcoin
42 votes -
How bad is Tesla’s hazardous waste problem in California?
15 votes -
Grindavík in Iceland now lies empty. Its people have fled and are beginning to face up to the realisation they may never be able live there again.
25 votes -
How nuclear power saved Armenia
9 votes -
How a US mining firm sued Mexico for billions – for trying to protect its own seabed
21 votes -
Greta Thunberg and four other climate activists are due to appear in court today after being arrested at a protest outside a gathering of fossil fuel bosses in London
22 votes -
Norway hit by hurricane-force winds – is climate change making Europe's extreme storms worse?
12 votes -
Helping bison find their way home to tribal lands
10 votes -
A shift towards a more sustainable global food system could create up to $10 trillion of benefits a year, improve human health, and ease the climate crisis
17 votes -
The $2.6 billion experiment to cover up Europe's dirty habit – Norwegian project to bury carbon waste under the sea is getting backing from Germany
8 votes -
Oil firms forced to consider full climate effects of new drilling, following landmark Norwegian court ruling
9 votes -
A wolf killed EU president Ursula von der Leyen’s family pony, it ignited a high-stakes battle
27 votes -
Has anyone else noticed a difference in their winters?
I moved to a place with an "actual" winter just over a decade ago -- snow, freezing temperatures, etc. In the first couple of years, I got what felt like a genuinely solid winter. Lots of...
I moved to a place with an "actual" winter just over a decade ago -- snow, freezing temperatures, etc. In the first couple of years, I got what felt like a genuinely solid winter. Lots of blisteringly cold days. Snow that fell in large amounts and stuck around for most of the season. I love winter, so this was great for me.
In recent years, however, the winters have been milder and milder. When we do get snow, it's only around for a bit because days above freezing are now frequent enough that it's able to melt between snowfalls. Also, the snowfalls themselves are more intermittent. This year specifically we've actually had more rain than snow. I don't remember getting rain in January when I first moved here.
It irks me a bit because the shift has been so stark and noticeable in such a short period of time. There's a part of me that thinks that it's not a big deal and maybe my first years here were unnaturally cold and snowy for the area, so what I'm seeing now is simply the other side of the mean, but then there's another part of me that feels like that's simply a comforting lie I can tell myself in the face of the obvious effects of climate change.
Is there anyone else here that feels like they're missing their winters?
56 votes -
Wind power is starting to learn big oil’s dirty little secret
11 votes -
Inside the crime rings trafficking sand
18 votes -
'Smoking gun proof': fossil fuel industry knew of climate danger as early as 1954, documents show
28 votes -
Norway defends deep-sea mining, says it may help to break China and Russia's rare earths stronghold
9 votes -
A landslide of contaminated soil threatens environmental disaster in Denmark. Who pays to stop it?
19 votes -
Can hydrogen help the world reach net zero?
14 votes -
Lessons from Finland's attempt to transition to a circular economy
15 votes -
Insect populations flourish in the restored habitats of solar energy facilities
27 votes -
Sámi rights activists in Norway charged over protests against wind farm affecting reindeer herding
13 votes -
The race to get next-generation solar technology on the market
9 votes -
A new kind of climate denial has taken over on YouTube
31 votes -
Iceland battles a lava flow – countries have built barriers and tried explosives in the past, but it's hard to stop molten rock
9 votes -
Norway's Arctic deep sea mining plan will inevitably sink – industrialising the ocean floor in the middle of a climate crisis is not only reckless, it's cruel
9 votes -
Vertical panels let solar and farming coexist
7 votes -
Oil companies will soon pay fees for emitting a climate ‘super-pollutant’
11 votes -
Norway's decision to permit exploratory deep-sea extraction of valuable minerals breaks a promise to the other nations on the Ocean Panel and to scientists
14 votes -
UK and Denmark launch Viking Link underwater cable project – potential to transport enough electricity to power up to 2.5 million UK homes
13 votes -
The neglected clean heat we flush down the drains
37 votes -
Iceland residents of Grindavík, first evacuated in November, have been told to evacuate again after volcanic fissures opened
17 votes -
Icelandic scientists are planning to drill two boreholes to a reservoir of liquid rock – world's first tunnel to a magma chamber
16 votes