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8 votes
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Sionic Energy unveils 100% silicon anode battery with high energy density
9 votes -
A planet-wide solar boom has been beating expectations at every turn. And it’s only just the beginning.
30 votes -
Goodbye refrigerants, hello magnets: Scientists develop cleaner, greener heat pump
54 votes -
Growing pollution in Pakistan’s Punjab province has sickened 1.8M people in a month, officials say
13 votes -
The destructive legacy of failed aquaculture
11 votes -
The hidden engineering of wildlife crossings
6 votes -
Sweden open to power cable project if Germany reforms, minister says
8 votes -
Arctic foxes were almost hunted to extinction in Sweden, Norway and Finland. Can projects to breed and feed them help this native species return for good?
6 votes -
As warmer Finnish winters melt the snow drifts that endangered Saimaa ringed seals use to raise their young, humans are giving them a helping hand
4 votes -
Anti-whaling activist Paul Watson has been released from prison in Greenland after Denmark rejected a Japanese request to extradite him
7 votes -
Russia launches a rescue operation after a storm damages two oil tankers in the Kerch Strait
12 votes -
IEA Report: The future of geothermal energy
14 votes -
Rare, widespread snowfall in Taklamakan Desert - China
16 votes -
Finland first in world to ban cargo ships from dumping untreated sewage
14 votes -
UK targets 45 GW solar, 22 GW BESS in Clean Power 2030 plan
6 votes -
A marine heat wave in the Pacific Ocean that began a decade ago killed some four million common murres in Alaska, researchers say
15 votes -
In a first, Arizona’s attorney general sues an industrial farm over its water use
26 votes -
You can now put an expandable, cost-effective solar roof rack on your EV for off-grid charging
15 votes -
Your returns most likely end up on the landfill and you are paying for it
34 votes -
Norway campaigns to cut energy links to Europe as power prices soar
7 votes -
Google says AI weather model masters 15-day forecast
28 votes -
America's largest reservoir sees rising water levels after decades of depletion thanks to conservation in California
24 votes -
Photovoltaic-thermal window achieves 3.6% electrical efficiency, provides hot water at 50 C
18 votes -
Largest solar and energy storage project in US approved
12 votes -
Sweden's wind power industry risks becoming a victim of its own success – rock-bottom energy prices are cooling renewable investment
14 votes -
Costs from hurricane Helene more than $53 billion in North Carolina. Currently available funding is significantly less than that.
14 votes -
The solar-panel backlash is here
23 votes -
Will China’s “green Great Wall” save it from encroaching sands?
9 votes -
California tsunami hazard area map
7 votes -
Iceland has authorised whale hunting for the next five years, despite welfare concerns
11 votes -
Putting numbers on projected increased energy demand from data centers
6 votes -
Tsunami warning issued in Northern California after 7.0-magnitude earthquake strikes off the coast
28 votes -
World's oldest known wild bird lays egg at '74'
22 votes -
Recordings by biologist Heike Vester reveal how oil and gas exploration as well as cruises, fishing boats and even whale-watchers are creating noise pollution that threatens return of Norway's whales
6 votes -
Oregon, USA introduces new statewide recycling rules to combat plastic waste
13 votes -
Carbon offsets and the Nebula show "Jet Lag"
Recently I've been watching the show Jet Lag on Nebula. It's an entertaining little reality show where people compete in contests which require a lot of travel, especially in commercial aircraft....
Recently I've been watching the show Jet Lag on Nebula. It's an entertaining little reality show where people compete in contests which require a lot of travel, especially in commercial aircraft.
I've noticed that they are really really traveling a lot for a frivolous reason and having a huge carbon footprint. (Yes I understand that the flights they go on are booked anyway and would fly if they weren't on them, sort of).
During the show they sometimes use a graphic to show the travel distance and then also mention that they are using Gold Standard carbon offsets (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_Standard_(carbon_offset_standard)
I've read a bit about carbon credits and carbon offsets before. I think it seems like a bit of a boondoggle to let people with money greenwash their activities. Has anyone here researched this and come up with a different conclusion?
I think maybe this is a very newbie question to ask on this Tildes group.
13 votes -
Norway has paused its controversial project to open up its seabed for commercial-scale deep-sea mining
17 votes -
Chinese pebble-bed reactor passes “meltdown” test
18 votes -
Bumblebee population increases 116 times over in Scotland rewilding project
31 votes -
Trees that traveled to space now live on Earth. Here's where to find them.
16 votes -
Norway wants to open its Arctic seabed to mining for critical metals – the WWF is suing the state in a bid to halt exploration
9 votes -
How an English castle became a stork magnet
17 votes -
Hurricane season appears to be unofficially over, so let’s do a quick review and talk about bomb cyclones in the West
7 votes -
China and India should not be called developing countries, several Cop29 delegates say
14 votes -
Danish lawmakers have agreed to plant one billion trees and convert 10% of farmland into natural habitats over the next two decades
27 votes -
Heat pumps used to struggle in the cold. Not anymore.
27 votes -
Delhi shuts schools, bans construction as pollution levels hit new high
15 votes -
Inside the successful, decades-long effort to protect the Humboldt Archipelago in Chile
7 votes