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6 votes
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A big chunk of ice has broken away from the Arctic's largest remaining ice shelf, Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden, in north-east Greenland – ejected section covers about 110 square km
13 votes -
Oregon residents are illegally stopping drivers at gunpoint during wildfire evacuations, sheriff says
16 votes -
At Iceland's Blue Lagoon you can swim in power plant wastewater – here's a story about geothermal energy, cheap heat, and how to keep some ducks warm
9 votes -
They know how to prevent megafires. Why won’t anybody listen?
12 votes -
Greenpeace occupies Swedish oil refinery over expansion plans – blockade culminated in six arrests after activists scaled harbour cranes at Brofjorden
5 votes -
What’s causing climate change, in ten charts
9 votes -
How Big Oil misled the public into believing plastic would be recycled
17 votes -
California El Dorado wildfire sparked by device to reveal baby's gender
14 votes -
People who live near the most toxic sites in America say they saw a level of attention they hadn't seen in decades under Donald Trump
18 votes -
US gives first-ever OK for small commercial nuclear reactor
19 votes -
Demand for whale meat in Norway rising after years of decline – conservationists say relaxing of regulations poses threat to welfare of minke whales
6 votes -
Gas hydrate dissociation linked to contemporary ocean warming in the southern hemisphere
4 votes -
2,000-year-old redwoods survive wildfire at California's oldest state park
8 votes -
CA Gov. Gavin Newsom: By this point last year, 4,292 fires had burned 56,000 acres. This year, 7,002 fires have chewed through more than 1.4 million acres.
7 votes -
Polar bear kills man in Norway's Arctic Svalbard islands – experts say polar bears' hunting grounds have diminished as the Arctic ice sheet melts
10 votes -
National Hurricane Center nailed track forecast for Laura within a mile and three days in advance
9 votes -
Norway plans to drill for oil in untouched Arctic areas – critics say plan for fields off Svalbard threatens ecosystem and relations with Russia
6 votes -
How a plan to save the power system disappeared: A federal lab found a way to modernize the grid, reduce reliance on coal, and save consumers billions. Then Trump appointees blocked it
24 votes -
Record heat, unprecedented lightning fire siege in Northern California; more dry lightning to come
11 votes -
Michigan reaches preliminary settlement to pay $600 million to Flint Water Crisis victims
9 votes -
Warming Greenland ice sheet passes point of no return
18 votes -
The millions being made from cardboard theft
7 votes -
The life that springs from dead leaves in streams
4 votes -
The final years of Majuro
5 votes -
Preparing for the next hurricane: Storm trackers and other survival tools
5 votes -
Exponential adoption of solar power by opium-growers in Afghanistan
7 votes -
Sea turns blood red as more than 250 whales slaughtered in 'barbaric' hunt in Faroe Islands – environmental activist calls for boycott
14 votes -
The great climate migration has begun
19 votes -
Dover clifftops 'buzzing with wildlife' after National Trust takeover
7 votes -
China blows up dam as death toll from flooding rises
12 votes -
Greta Thunberg has been awarded a Portuguese rights award and promptly pledged the €1m prize to groups working to protect the environment and halt climate change
13 votes -
Book review: Bad science and bad arguments abound in 'Apocalypse Never' by Michael Shellenberger
2 votes -
One of the most robust laws on climate change yet has been created in Denmark – can legislation really make failing to act on climate change illegal?
5 votes -
Murders, megaprojects and a 'new Panama Canal' in Mexico
3 votes -
Help me understand the significance of EROI?
According to this guy, societal collapse is imminent because a. entropy and b. the high EROI (energy return on investment) afforded to society by the use of energy dense hydrocarbons such as coal...
According to this guy, societal collapse is imminent because a. entropy and b. the high EROI (energy return on investment) afforded to society by the use of energy dense hydrocarbons such as coal and petroleum will decline dramatically in the near future due to the decreasing economic viability of acquiring them and the lack of a similarly high return alternative (barring nuclear fission, which is VeRy DaNgErOuS (and also practically infeasible politically in most countries that can achieve it), and nuclear fusion, which is, of course, perpetually 20 years away) and because this EROI is (according to him) what makes the complexity of modern civilization possible, it is inevitable that we will soon see a corresponding decline in said complexity (collapse). Now there is a section in the wikipedia article that touches on some of these points (Economic influence) so it's not totally junk science (if you trust Wikipedia, that is). However, I'm still struggling to grasp the significance of this figure. As long as our means of acquiring energy is scalable, why does it matter what the EROI is as long as it is greater than 1? if we need to spend one fifth of the energy we get from solar panels on making more, fixing existing ones, and installation, can't we just make a bunch of them to match our energy needs, even if they're growing? What am I missing here?
7 votes -
Work has begun on Viking Link, the world's longest electricity interconnector which will allow power to travel between the UK and Denmark
5 votes -
Climate change has likely already affected global food production
5 votes -
Will climate change upend projections of future forest growth?
6 votes -
Scientists' warning on affluence
11 votes -
The South Pole is warming fast. Very fast.
10 votes -
What we need to know about the pace of decarbonization -- Energy transitions have been among the key defining processes of human evolution
4 votes -
Climate change is an absolute nightmare - this is why
10 votes -
Vermont first state to implement a statewide ban on food waste
10 votes -
There are climate change policies that rural Americans—even Republicans—support
6 votes -
Latest UN sustainability goals pose more harm than good for environment, scientists warn
4 votes -
Tree ring records show increase in extreme weather in South America
4 votes -
CO2 in Earth's atmosphere nearing levels of fifteen million years ago
5 votes -
Climate change may cause extreme waves in the Arctic
5 votes -
Spreading rock dust on the ground could pull carbon from the air, researchers say
14 votes