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'Basic peer pressure’: The plan to turn out millions of pro-climate voters in the 2024 U.S. election:

 
'Basic peer pressure’: The plan to turn out millions of pro-climate voters in the 2024 U.S. election - Yale Climate Connections - Policy
Apr 24 · Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Yale Climate Connections
With the November election fast approaching, political campaigns across the country are targeting that most coveted of groups: “likely voters.” Once identified, most campaigns inundate them with mailers, phone calls, and advertisements.
But the Environmental Voter Project flips conventional campaign wisdom. The nonprofit goes after those with voting records so dismal they’re written off by other campaigns. The Environmental Voter Project’s founder and director Nathaniel Stinnett believes there’s gold in those “unlikely voter” rolls, and his ...
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'So hot you can't breathe': Extreme heat hits the Philippines:

 
'So hot you can't breathe': Extreme heat hits the Philippines - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Extreme heat scorched the Philippines on Wednesday, forcing schools in some areas to suspend in-person classes and prompting warnings for people to limit the amount of time spent outdoors.
The months of March, April and May are typically the hottest and driest in the archipelago nation, but conditions this year have been exacerbated by the El Niño weather phenomenon.
"It's so hot you can't breathe," said Erlin Tumaron, 60, who works at a seaside resort in Cavite province, south of Manila, where the heat index reached 47 degrees Celsius (117 degrees Fahrenheit) on Tuesday.
"It's surprising our pools are still empty. You would expect people to come and take a swim, ...
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'Sunny day flooding' increases fecal contamination of coastal waters:

 
'Sunny day flooding' increases fecal contamination of coastal waters - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · "Historically we see the highest levels of fecal bacteria contamination in coastal waterways after it rains, because the rain washes contaminants into the waterways," says Natalie Nelson, corresponding author of a paper on the study and an associate professor of biological and agricultural engineering at North Carolina State University.
"Due to sea level rise, we're seeing an increase in flooding in coastal areas at high tide—even when there isn't any rainfall. We wanted to see whether sunny day floods were associated with increases in fecal bacteria contamination in waterways."
For the study, researchers collected water samples every day for two summer months at ...
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'Sunny Day Flooding' Increases Fecal Contamination of Coastal Waters:

 
'Sunny Day Flooding' Increases Fecal Contamination of Coastal Waters - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A new study finds that "sunny day flooding," which occurs during high tides, increases the levels of fecal bacteria in coastal waters. While the elevated bacteria levels in the coastal waters tend to dissipate quickly, the findings suggest policymakers and public health officials should be aware of potential risks associated with tidal flooding.
"Historically we see the highest levels of fecal bacteria contamination in coastal waterways after it rains, because the rain washes contaminants into the waterways," says Natalie Nelson, corresponding author of a paper on the study and an associate professor of biological and agricultural engineering at North Carolina State ...
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44% of Latinos live in U.S. counties with a high flood risk:

 
44% of Latinos live in U.S. counties with a high flood risk - Yale Climate Connections - Policy
Apr 23 · Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Yale Climate Connections
In recent years, many U.S. residents have endured devastating floods.
But a new report from the nonprofits Headwaters Economics and Hispanic Access Foundation warns that Latino communities in the states are especially at risk.
The authors found that 44% of Latinos live in counties with a high flood risk, compared to just 35% of non-Latinos.
What’s more, Latino residents often face other challenges like language barriers and high housing costs, which can make floods even more harmful.
Hernandez: “A third of Latinos live in flood-prone ...
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A new electrochemical approach could reduce ocean acidity and remove carbon in the process:

 
A new electrochemical approach could reduce ocean acidity and remove carbon in the process - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Only 45 percent of carbon dioxide emissions remain in the atmosphere; the remainder is absorbed through two cycles: 1) the biological carbon cycle stores CO2 in plant matter and soils, and 2) the aqueous carbon cycle absorbs CO2 from the atmosphere into the oceans. Each of these cycles accounts for 25 percent and 30 percent of emitted CO2, respectively.
CO2 that dissolves in the oceans reacts to form chemicals that increase the acidity of the oceans. The dissolution of minerals from rocks along coastlines act to counterbalance this acidity, in a process called geological weathering, but the extreme increase in the rate and volume of CO2 emissions, especially over the last 60 ...
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A shade closer to more efficient organic photovoltaics:

 
A shade closer to more efficient organic photovoltaics - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Semitransparent photovoltaics are able to convert sunlight into electricity without blocking visible light. This makes them attractive for building integrated applications, such as windows, facades and greenhouses.
Unlike traditional silicon-based cells, organic photovoltaics can be flexible and can also be tailored to be transparent. Yet the more transparent the solar cell, the less light it captures for producing electricity.
Organic solar cells typically rely on an active layer called a bulk heterojunction—comprised of electron donor and acceptor materials—to capture and convert sunlight. Upon contact, sunlight can excite electrons to higher energy states ...
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Accelerated marine carbon cycling forced by tectonic degassing over the Miocene Climate Optimum:

 
Accelerated marine carbon cycling forced by tectonic degassing over the Miocene Climate Optimum - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · In a recent publication in Science Bulletin, a multidisciplinary team of authors from Tongji University, the Second Institute of Oceanography (Ministry of Natural Resources), the Institute of Earth Environment (Chinese Academy of Sciences), and Utrecht University reports for the first time that massive carbon inputs from volcanism and seafloor spreading have impacted the orbital phase relationships between carbon cycle and climate change.
Past changes in climate and carbon cycle have been documented by the stable isotope composition of benthic foraminiferal oxygen and carbon, as they are proxies for climate-cryosphere and carbon transfers between the ocean and other ...
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Activist groups not directly involved in Tiwi Island lawsuit must hand over documents to Santos, court rules:

 
Activist groups not directly involved in Tiwi Island lawsuit must hand over documents to Santos, court rules - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · Broad terms of subpoenas a 'chilling’ precedent that could undermine future climate litigation, legal experts say
A federal court judge has allowed Santos to subpoena paperwork held by three activist groups who were not directly involved in a lawsuit against the oil company.
Justice Natalie Charlesworth ruled on Wednesday afternoon that Santos could pursue financial records and communications between activist groups – Sunrise, Jubilee Australia and the NT Environment Centre – and the Environmental Defenders Office (EDO) in order to determine whether the company will also pursue the campaign organisations for costs for the lawsuit carried out by the EDO on behalf of Tiwi ...
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Aerogel-based phase change materials improve thermal management, reduce microwave emissions in electronic devices:

 
Aerogel-based phase change materials improve thermal management, reduce microwave emissions in electronic devices - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · Chinese scientists from Beijing Normal University have been working on building shielding for electronic devices using multifunctional composite phase change materials (PCMs) to address these performance issues.
PCMs are man-made materials built by combining different types of elements, allowing the creation of a new material with very specific purpose driven characteristics. In this case, the researchers are looking to improve thermal management, solar-thermal conversion and microwave absorption in the electronic devices.
Using engineering inspired by biological systems, they built a neural network-inspired aerogel that increases the efficiency of thermal management and ...
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Africa's megacities threatened by heat, floods, disease - action needed to start greening, adapt to climate change:

 
Africa's megacities threatened by heat, floods, disease - action needed to start greening, adapt to climate change - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · African megacities like Lagos, Nigeria (with 21 million residents) and Cairo, Egypt (with 10 million residents) are experiencing significant temperature increases due to the urban heat island effect and climate change.
Meelan Thondoo is a medical anthropologist and environmental epidemiologist who researches the health impacts of climate change in cities of fast-developing countries. She explains what cities in Africa are doing to mitigate climate change, and what further steps they need to take to protect their populations.
What health effects of climate change do African cities experience?
Currently, 3.3 billion to 3.6 billion people globally live in cities that ...
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AI Weather Forecasts Captured Ciaran's Destructive Path:

 
AI Weather Forecasts Captured Ciaran's Destructive Path - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Artificial intelligence (AI) can quickly and accurately predict the path and intensity of major storms, a new study has demonstrated.
Professor Andrew Charlton-Perez, who led the study, said: "AI is transforming weather forecasting before our eyes. Two years ago, modern machine learning techniques were rarely being applied to make weather forecasts. Now we have multiple models that can produce 10-day global forecasts in minutes.
"There is a great deal we can learn about AI weather forecasts by stress-testing them on extreme events like Storm Ciarán. We can identify their strengths and weaknesses and guide the development of even better AI forecasting technology to ...
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Airborne interferometric radar altimeter shows potential for submesoscale sea surface height anomaly measurements:

 
Airborne interferometric radar altimeter shows potential for submesoscale sea surface height anomaly measurements - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Their study was published in Remote Sensing on April 12.
To date, humanity has not been able to observe two-dimensional (2D) oceanic processes at the 0.1–10 km submesoscale in the spatial domain using remote sensing. The SSHA signal at this scale is small and exceeds the resolution limits of the satellite altimeters used to date.
However, oceanic processes at this scale play a critical role in the study of ocean energy transfer, cascading, and dissipation, and are crucial for research on ocean energy balance, nutrient transport, and global climate change studies.
In this study, the researchers provided a detailed analysis of the SSHA and its wavenumber ...
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Airborne observations of Asian monsoon sees ozone-depleting substances lofting into the stratosphere:

 
Airborne observations of Asian monsoon sees ozone-depleting substances lofting into the stratosphere - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · The study, led by the U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF NCAR) and NASA, found that the East Asian Monsoon delivers more than twice the concentration of very short-lived ozone-depleting substances into the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere than previously reported.
"It was a real surprise to fly through a plume with all those very short-lived ozone-depleting substances," said NSF NCAR scientist Laura Pan, the lead author of the study. "These chemicals may have a significant impact on what will happen with the ozone layer, and it's critical to quantify them."
The study was published in the Proceedings of the National ...
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Artificial intelligence helps scientists engineer plants to fight climate change:

 
Artificial intelligence helps scientists engineer plants to fight climate change - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · To design these climate-saving plants, scientists in Salk's Harnessing Plants Initiative are using a sophisticated new research tool called SLEAP—an easy-to-use artificial intelligence (AI) software that tracks multiple features of root growth. Created by Salk Fellow Talmo Pereira, SLEAP was initially designed to track animal movement in the lab. Now, Pereira has teamed up with plant scientist and Salk colleague Professor Wolfgang Busch to apply SLEAP to plants.
In a study published in Plant Phenomics, Busch and Pereira debut a new protocol for using SLEAP to analyze plant root phenotypes—how deep and wide they grow, how massive their root systems become, and other ...
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Artificial Intelligence Helps Scientists Engineer Plants to Fight Climate Change:

 
Artificial Intelligence Helps Scientists Engineer Plants to Fight Climate Change - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) declared that removing carbon from the atmosphere is now essential to fighting climate change and limiting global temperature rise. To support these efforts, Salk scientists are harnessing plants' natural ability to draw carbon dioxide out of the air by optimizing their root systems to store more carbon for a longer period of time.
To design these climate-saving plants, scientists in Salk's Harnessing Plants Initiative are using a sophisticated new research tool called SLEAP -- an easy-to-use artificial intelligence (AI) software that tracks multiple features of root growth. Created by Salk Fellow Talmo Pereira, SLEAP was ...
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Asian Monsoon Lofts Ozone-Depleting Substances to Stratosphere:

 
Asian Monsoon Lofts Ozone-Depleting Substances to Stratosphere - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Powerful monsoon winds, strengthened by a warming climate, are lofting unexpectedly large quantities of ozone-depleting substances high into the atmosphere over East Asia, new research shows.
The study, led by the U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF NCAR) and NASA, found that the East Asian Monsoon delivers more than twice the concentration of very short-lived ozone-depleting substances into the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere than previously reported.
"It was a real surprise to fly through a plume with all those very short-lived ozone-depleting substances," said NSF NCAR scientist Laura Pan, the lead author of the ...
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Australia's tall, wet forests were not open and park-like when colonists arrived - and we shouldn't be burning them:

 
Australia's tall, wet forests were not open and park-like when colonists arrived - and we shouldn't be burning them - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 24 · A key question then is: what does the evidence say about what tall, wet forests actually looked like 250 years ago? The answer matters because it influences how these forests are managed. It's also needed to guide efforts to restore them to their natural state.
In a new scientific paper, we looked carefully at the body of evidence on the natural pre-invasion state of Australian forests, such as those dominated by majestic mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans), the world's tallest flowering plant. We analyzed historical documents, First Nations Peoples' recorded testimonies and the scientific evidence.
Our analysis shows most areas of mainland mountain ash forests were likely ...
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Bacteria for climate-neutral chemicals of the future:

 
Bacteria for climate-neutral chemicals of the future - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · To produce various chemicals such as plastics, dyes or artificial flavors, the chemical industry currently relies heavily on fossil resources such as crude oil. "Globally, it consumes 500 million tons per year, or more than one million tons per day," says Julia Vorholt, Professor at the Institute of Microbiology at ETH Zurich.
"Since these chemical conversions are energy-intensive, the true CO2 footprint of the chemical industry is even six to 10 times larger, amounting to about five percent of total emissions globally." She and her team are looking for ways to reduce the chemical industry's dependence on fossil fuels.
Green methanol
Bacteria that feed on methanol, ...
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Balancing AI and physics: Toward a learnable climate model:

 
Balancing AI and physics: Toward a learnable climate model - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Previous studies have demonstrated that Pangu-Weather can accurately replicate certain climate patterns like tropical Gill responses and extra-tropical teleconnections through qualitative analysis. However, quantitative investigations have revealed significant differences in wind components, such as divergent winds and ageostrophic winds, within current AI weather models. Despite these findings, there are still concerns that the importance of physics in climate science is sometimes overlooked.
"The qualitative assessment finds AI models could understand and learn spatial patterns in weather and climate data. On the other hand, the quantitative approach highlights a limitation: ...
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Beyond higher temperatures: Preparing for national security risks posed by climate change:

 
Beyond higher temperatures: Preparing for national security risks posed by climate change - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · But also at stake is the security of the United States and other nations. What if people become desperate for food? What if long-dormant microbes come to life due to thawing permafrost? What if water and electricity become scarce?
These are the sorts of questions that researchers at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) are asking as they take part in a series of national forums. Scientists have raised these questions and more at recent gatherings of the American Geophysical Union (AGU), the American Meteorological Society, and the U.S. military.
This week, as the world celebrates Earth Day, more than a dozen PNNL scientists and others ...
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Biden Finalizes Plan To Overhaul Dirty Power Grid And Reduce Blackouts:

 
Biden Finalizes Plan To Overhaul Dirty Power Grid And Reduce Blackouts - Huffington Post
Apr 25 · The Biden administration rolled out its plan Thursday to overhaul the United States’ aging patchwork of fossil-fueled electrical grids, finishing work on a suite of regulations designed to rein in rising utility bills and stem worsening blackouts while cutting planet-heating pollution from power plants.
The regulatory package includes the nation’s first-ever limits on greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, tighter restrictions on mercury gas and coal ash, and a new way to speed up construction of badly needed transmission lines.
Paired with the billions of dollars in carrots for manufacturing, building and buying modern energy equipment that came with President Joe ...
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Black hole 'traffic jams' discovered in galactic centers by astronomers:

 
Black hole 'traffic jams' discovered in galactic centers by astronomers - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 24 · The study's findings shed light on the gravitational-wave (GW) emissions resulting from the merger of black holes, events detectable by instruments such as the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO).
When two black holes come too close, they disturb space-time itself, emitting gravitational waves before eventually merging into one.
Dr. Evgeni Grishin, a postdoctoral research fellow from Monash University School of Physics and Astronomy who led the study, likened the phenomenon to a busy intersection without functioning traffic lights.
"We looked at how many and where we'd have these busy intersections," Dr. Grishin said.
Additionally, the ...
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Breaking Down New Rules About 'Forever Chemicals’:

 
Breaking Down New Rules About 'Forever Chemicals’ - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 24 · Lisa Friedman, who covers climate change, discussed the fight to regulate toxic chemicals found in nearly half of America’s tap water.
Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together.
Cookware. Dental floss. Shampoo.
Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, known as PFAS, can be found in those items and hundreds of other household products. Nicknamed “forever chemicals” because they do not fully degrade, PFAS are resistant to heat, oil, grease and water. (One of the first uses of PFAS chemicals was as a nonstick agent in Teflon cookware in the 1940s.) But exposure to PFAS has been ...
| By Josh Ocampo    Read more ...
 

Can climate change accelerate transmission of malaria? New research sheds light on impacts of temperature:

 
Can climate change accelerate transmission of malaria? New research sheds light on impacts of temperature - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · In tropical and subtropical regions where malaria is prevalent, scientists are concerned that climate warming might increase the risk of malaria transmission in certain areas and contribute to further spread. However, there is still much to learn about the relationship between temperature and the mosquito and parasite traits that influence malaria transmission.
In "Estimating the effects of temperature on transmission of the human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum," a study published in the journal Nature Communications, researchers at the University of Florida, Pennsylvania State University and Imperial College, combined novel experimental data within an innovative ...
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Car giants vie for EV crown at Beijing's Auto China show:

 
Car giants vie for EV crown at Beijing's Auto China show - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 25 · Chinese car giants locked in a cut-throat price war descended on the capital for the start of the Auto China show Thursday, vying to draw consumers and headlines in the world's biggest electric vehicle market and abroad.
China's EV sector has exploded in recent years, and firms are now engaged in a no-holds-barred battle to offer customers the coolest accessories at the lowest prices.
EV makers from China have made inroads into markets from Europe to Southeast Asia and Tesla's Elon Musk described them in January as "the most competitive car companies in the world".
Beijing's Auto China show, which lasts until May 4, sees dozens of firms square off in a bid to draw ...
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Climate change expected to increase wildfire danger:

 
Climate change expected to increase wildfire danger - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · There is likely to be a significant increase in the danger of wildfires through the 21st century. Indeed, the expectation is that by 2100 the danger will be high even in regions where it is very low today. Those are the findings of a study by Julia Miller, a Ph.D. student in the SLF's Hydrology & Climate Impacts in Mountain Regions research group, published in Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences.
Forecasts show that the potential danger will continue to increase, but from 2040 onwards it will exceed the natural range of climate fluctuations and so will be attributed to climate change from then on. Taking the example of the Bavarian Alpine Foreland, this means that the ...
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Climate change supercharged a heat dome, intensifying 2021 fire season, study finds:

 
Climate change supercharged a heat dome, intensifying 2021 fire season, study finds - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · A new study has revealed the extent to which human-caused climate change intensified the extraordinary event, with researchers theorizing the heat dome was 34% larger and lasted nearly 60% longer than it would have in the absence of global warming. The heat dome, in turn, was associated with up to a third of the area burned in North America that year, according to the study, published in Communications Earth & Environment.
"What happens is you get a stagnated weather pattern—it's very hot and very dry," said study author Piyush Jain, research scientist with Natural Resources Canada. "And it dries out all the vegetation and makes whatever is on the ground extremely ...
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Diversity and productivity go branch-in-branch: Scientists share which forests can adapt to climate change:

 
Diversity and productivity go branch-in-branch: Scientists share which forests can adapt to climate change - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Now, a study by an international group, including Kyoto University, found that forests with higher trait diversity not only adapt better to climate change but may also thrive. The work is published in the journal Science Advances.
The study, conducted by researchers from Lakehead University, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, and Zhejiang Agriculture and Forestry University, unveiled how tree functional trait diversity—a key aspect of biodiversity—plays a pivotal role in mitigating climate warming.
"In the face of environmental stress, these diverse trees have been shown to maintain higher productivity levels, in contrast to monoculture ...
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DOD Combines Adaptation, Mitigation to Confront Climate Change:

 
DOD Combines Adaptation, Mitigation to Confront Climate Change - defense.gov
Apr 23 · Official websites use .gov
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
The Defense Department is actively engaging a two-pronged approach to confront climate change by avoiding the unmanageable while at the same time managing the unavoidable, according to one DOD climate official.
Kate White Kate White, director of the Defense Department’s Climate Resilience Program, discusses how DOD is tackling climate change during remarks at Brown University’s Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, April 23, 2024. Share: × Share Copy Link Email Facebook X LinkedIn WhatsApp Download: Full Size (552.96 KB) Photo By: Courtesy photo VIRIN: ...
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Early analysis finds eclipse had noticeable effect on birds:

 
Early analysis finds eclipse had noticeable effect on birds - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · Early results from a study of the April 8 total solar eclipse show a more noticeable effect on bird behavior than during the last eclipse.
"From the data we've analyzed so far, it looks like a similar pattern of aerial biological activity that we documented during the 2017 solar eclipse, but it was even more pronounced," said Cornell Lab researcher Andrew Farnsworth.
"The 13 weather radar stations in the path of the April eclipse measured noticeable decreases in typical daytime biological activities such as the movements of hawks and other soaring and insect-eating birds like swallows - but, as in 2017, the daytime darkness was not enough to trigger nocturnal migration ...
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Ecosystems are deeply interconnected - environmental research, policy and management should be too:

 
Ecosystems are deeply interconnected - environmental research, policy and management should be too - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · We have a lot to learn still, but as we show in our research, using current ecological knowledge more effectively could deliver substantial environmental gains.
Our work focuses on improving links between research and ecosystem management to identify key trigger points for action in a framework that joins land, freshwater and sea ecosystems.
Specifically, we investigate solutions to environmental and societal problems that stem from the disparities between scientific research, policy and management responses to environmental issues.
We need managers and policy makers to consider ecological tipping points and how they can cascade though ecosystems from land into ...
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Emperor penguins perish as ice melts to new lows: Study:

 
Emperor penguins perish as ice melts to new lows: Study - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 25 · Colonies of emperor penguin chicks were wiped out last year as global warming eroded their icy homes, a study published Thursday found, despite the birds' attempts to adapt to the shrinking landscape.
The study by the British Antarctic Survey found that record-low sea ice levels in 2023 contributed to the second-worst year for emperor penguin chick mortality since observations began in 2018.
It follows a "catastrophic breeding failure" in 2022, signaling long-term implications for the population, the study's author Peter Fretwell told AFP.
Emperor penguins breed on sea-ice platforms, with chicks hatching in the winter between late July and mid-August.
The ...
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Energy Dept. Aims to Speed Up Permits for Power Lines:

 
Energy Dept. Aims to Speed Up Permits for Power Lines - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 25 · The Biden administration has expressed growing alarm that efforts to fight climate change could falter unless the electric grids are quickly expanded.
Reporting from Washington
The Biden administration on Thursday finalized a rule meant to speed up federal permits for major transmission lines, part of a broader push to expand America’s electric grids.
Administration officials are increasingly worried that their plans to fight climate change could falter unless the nation can quickly add vast amounts of grid capacity to handle more wind and solar power and to better tolerate extreme weather. The pace of construction for high-voltage power lines has sharply slowed ...
| By Brad Plumer    Read more ...
 

Energy-smart bricks keep waste out of landfill:

 
Energy-smart bricks keep waste out of landfill - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · RMIT University engineers collaborated with Visy—Australia's largest recycling company—to make bricks with a minimum of 15% waste glass and 20% combusted solid waste (ash), as substitutes for clay.
Test results indicate that using these bricks in the construction of a single-story building could reduce household energy bills by up to 5% compared to regular bricks, due to improved insulation.
Replacing clay with waste materials in the brick production helped reduce the firing temperature by up to 20% compared with standard brick mixtures, offering potential cost savings to manufacturers.
Team leader Associate Professor Dilan Robert said about 1.4 ...
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Estimating emissions potential of decommissioned gas wells from shale samples:

 
Estimating emissions potential of decommissioned gas wells from shale samples - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · The findings, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, revealed that methane begins diffusing from the shale formation after a well is decommissioned and that this represents a notable source of methane emissions—comparable to the most significant emissions during drilling and operation of the well.
"Natural gas is an important energy resource that has helped the U.S. lower its carbon dioxide emissions, but we also understand methane can be a potential hazard," said Shimin Liu, professor of energy and mineral engineering at Penn State and a co-author of the study. "What this work does is give us a proactive way to understand what's going on in the ...
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EU lawmakers agree to exit energy treaty over climate fears:

 
EU lawmakers agree to exit energy treaty over climate fears - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · The European Parliament on Wednesday backed the EU's withdrawal from an international energy treaty over concerns it offers too much protection to fossil fuel companies.
The Energy Charter Treaty was signed in 1994, after the end of the Cold War, to offer guarantees to investors in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
But the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, said in July it was necessary to withdraw from the treaty in a coordinated manner since it is "no longer compatible" with the bloc's "enhanced climate ambition".
During a parliament vote in Strasbourg, 560 lawmakers gave the green light for a withdrawal, while 43 voted against and 27 ...
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Exploring a molecular mechanism that facilitates thermophilic fungal adaptation to temperature change:

 
Exploring a molecular mechanism that facilitates thermophilic fungal adaptation to temperature change - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · In early 2010, the team reported that a predominant thermophilic fungus Thermomyces dupontii produced a new class of prenylated indole alkaloids (PIAs), bearing the striking structural features of a key putative versatile precursor that has long been proposed for the well-known complex PIAs in mesophilic fungi.
In their latest study published in the journal Mycology, the team sought to determine why T. dupontii produced such a class of PIAs. They aimed at two P450 genes in the gene cluster responsible for PIAs, because P450 can modify and transform secondary metabolites to generate diverse and complex metabolites.
What's more, the ecological importance of P450 genes ...
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Extreme heat scorches Southeast Asia, bringing school closures and warnings:

 
Extreme heat scorches Southeast Asia, bringing school closures and warnings - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Extreme heat scorched parts of South and Southeast Asia Wednesday, prompting schools across the Philippines to suspend classes, heat warnings in the Thai capital and worshippers in Bangladesh to pray for rain.
The high temperatures were recorded just a day after the United Nations said Asia was the region that suffered the most disasters from climate and weather hazards in 2023, with floods and storms the chief causes of casualties and economic losses.
Extensive scientific research has found climate change is causing heat waves to become longer, more frequent and more intense.
"It's so hot you can't breathe," said Erlin Tumaron, 60, who works at a Philippine ...
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Feedback Loop That Is Melting Ice Shelves in West Antarctica Revealed:

 
Feedback Loop That Is Melting Ice Shelves in West Antarctica Revealed - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · The study, published in Science Advances, sheds new light on the mechanisms driving the melting of ice shelves beneath the surface of the ocean, which have been unclear until now.
The West Antarctic Ice Sheet has been losing mass in recent decades, contributing to global sea level rise. If it were to melt entirely, global sea levels would rise by around five meters.
It's known that Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW), a water mass that is up to 4°C above local freezing temperatures, is flowing beneath the ice shelves in West Antarctica and melting them from below. Since so much of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet lies below sea level, it is particularly vulnerable to this warm ...
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Five Things to Know About Biden’s New Power Plant Rules:

 
Five Things to Know About Biden’s New Power Plant Rules - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 25 · The Biden administration released a major climate regulation aimed at virtually eliminating carbon emissions from coal, the dirtiest of the fossil fuels and a driver of global warming.
The Biden administration has effectively moved to end the use of coal to keep the lights on in America. On Thursday, the Environmental Protection Agency released four major regulations designed to slash multiple forms of toxic and planet-warming pollution from coal-fired power plants, the nation’s dirtiest source of electricity.
The most consequential of the new rules is aimed at nearly eliminating carbon dioxide emissions from the coal plants. The other three rules would cut the emission ...
| By Coral Davenport and Lisa Friedman    Read more ...
 

From the coast to the deep sea, changing oxygen levels affect marine life in different ways:

 
From the coast to the deep sea, changing oxygen levels affect marine life in different ways - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Marine species respond to ocean deoxygenation (the decrease of oxygen levels in seawater) differently depending on where they live. With seas under threat from climate change and pollution, both of which contribute to deoxygenation, some marine species are at greater risk than others.
As a marine ecologist, I research how changes in oxygen availability affect marine animals' resistance to climate change. My studies show that coastal marine species exposed to the daily variability of oxygen are more resistant to spikes in deoxygenation than creatures living in the deep that are adapted to consistent oxygen levels.
By the coast
For coastal creatures like cuttlefish, ...
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Future hurricanes could compromise New England forests' ability to store and sequester carbon:

 
Future hurricanes could compromise New England forests' ability to store and sequester carbon - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Nature-based climate solutions can help mitigate climate change, especially in forested regions capable of storing and sequestering vast amounts of carbon. New research published in Global Change Biology indicates that a single hurricane in New England, one of the most heavily forested regions in the United States, can down 4.6–9.4% of the total above-ground forest carbon, an amount much greater than the carbon sequestered annually by New England's forests.
The work revealed that emissions from hurricanes are not instantaneous - it takes approximately 19 years for downed carbon to become a net emission, and 100 years for 90% of the downed carbon to be emitted.
Models ...
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Heatstroke kills 30 in Thailand this year as kingdom bakes:

 
Heatstroke kills 30 in Thailand this year as kingdom bakes - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 25 · Thailand issued fresh warnings about scorching hot weather on Thursday as the government said heatstroke has already killed at least 30 people this year.
City authorities in Bangkok gave an extreme heat warning as the heat index was expected to rise above 52 degrees Celsius (125 degrees Fahrenheit).
Temperatures in the concrete sprawl of the Thai capital hit 40.1 C on Wednesday and similar levels were forecast for Thursday.
A wave of exceptionally hot weather has blasted parts of South and Southeast Asia this week, prompting schools across the Philippines to suspend classes and worshippers in Bangladesh to pray for rain.
The heat index - a measure of what the ...
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Helping countries reach their climate goals | UNDP Climate Promise:

 
Helping countries reach their climate goals | UNDP Climate Promise - undp
Apr 23 · UNDP’s Climate Promise 2025, in collaboration with the UN, private sector, and civil society partners, will support new round of climate pledges by developing countries - initiative will provide major boost to goal of limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius
Climate Promise 2025 draws on UNDP’s newly established Climate Hub, which delivers the UN system’s largest portfolio of support on climate action. This portfolio draws on UNDP’s expertise on gender equality, energy, poverty, health, climate security, nature and biodiversity, among others.
New York, 23 April 2024 – The UN Development Programme (UNDP) today unveiled the next stage of the Climate Promise ...
    Read more ...
 

High air pollution in Denmark may impact children's academic performance:

 
High air pollution in Denmark may impact children's academic performance - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Pollution from traffic, farming and wood stoves may have a negative effect on children's cognitive development, according to a new study published in Environment International on Danish students' performance in the lower secondary school leaving examination.
You probably don't think about it, but in most parts of the country the air we breathe is anything but clean.
In most parts of Denmark air pollution is double the recommended WHO level, with the highest levels found in heavily trafficked cities and southern Denmark, which is affected by polluted air blowing in from the south.
And polluted air can affect our health, previous research has shown. In fact, air ...
    Read more ...
 

High-Resolution Lidar Sees Birth Zone of Cloud Droplets:

 
High-Resolution Lidar Sees Birth Zone of Cloud Droplets - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A team led by atmospheric scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory has demonstrated the first-ever remote observations of the fine-scale structure at the base of clouds. The results, just published in the Nature publication NPJ Climate and Atmospheric Science, show that the air-cloud interface is not a perfect boundary but rather is a transition zone where aerosol particles suspended in Earth's atmosphere give rise to the droplets that ultimately form clouds.
"We are interested in this 'droplet activation zone,' where most cloud droplets are initially formed at the cloud base, because the number of droplets formed there will affect the later ...
    Read more ...
 

How creating less-gassy cows could help fight climate change:

 
How creating less-gassy cows could help fight climate change - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · The food system, including grazing animals such as cows, generates major sources of methane mainly due to cattle digestion, manure decomposition and land use for grazing.
To look for solutions, researchers from the Curtin University Sustainability Policy Institute analyzed 27 academic publications and identified dozens of potential strategies to reduce methane emissions from Australia's beef and dairy sectors. "Meta-Analysis and Ranking of the Most Effective Methane Reduction Strategies for Australia's Beef and Dairy Sector" was published in Climate.
Study lead Merideth Kelliher said the fastest way to lower methane emissions would be to convert farmland into wetlands ...
    Read more ...
 

How divestment became a 'clarion call’ in anti-fossil fuel and pro-ceasefire protests:

 
How divestment became a 'clarion call’ in anti-fossil fuel and pro-ceasefire protests - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · The divestment movement has a long history among US student activists, including in the overlapping movements of today
Cameron Jones first learned about fossil fuel divestment as a 15-year-old climate organizer. When he enrolled at Columbia University in 2022, he joined the campus’s chapter of the youth-led climate justice group the Sunrise Movement and began pushing the school in New York to sever financial ties with coal, oil and gas companies.
“The time for institutions like Columbia to be in the pocket of fossil fuel corporations has passed,” Jones wrote in an October 2023 op-ed in the student newspaper directed toward the Columbia president, Minouche ...
    Read more ...
 

How Light Can Vaporize Water Without the Need for Heat:

 
How Light Can Vaporize Water Without the Need for Heat - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · It's the most fundamental of processes -- the evaporation of water from the surfaces of oceans and lakes, the burning off of fog in the morning sun, and the drying of briny ponds that leaves solid salt behind. Evaporation is all around us, and humans have been observing it and making use of it for as long as we have existed.
And yet, it turns out, we've been missing a major part of the picture all along.
In a series of painstakingly precise experiments, a team of researchers at MIT has demonstrated that heat isn't alone in causing water to evaporate. Light, striking the water's surface where air and water meet, can break water molecules away and float them into the air, ...
    Read more ...
 

How light can vaporize water without the need for heat:

 
How light can vaporize water without the need for heat - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · And yet, it turns out, we've been missing a major part of the picture all along.
In a series of painstakingly precise experiments, a team of researchers at MIT has demonstrated that heat isn't alone in causing water to evaporate. Light, striking the water's surface where air and water meet, can break water molecules away and float them into the air, causing evaporation in the absence of any source of heat.
The astonishing new discovery could have a wide range of significant implications. It could help explain mysterious measurements over the years of how sunlight affects clouds, and therefore affect calculations of the effects of climate change on cloud cover and ...
    Read more ...
 

How potatoes, corn and beans led to breakthrough in smart windows technology:

 
How potatoes, corn and beans led to breakthrough in smart windows technology - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · A study from researchers at The University of Texas at Austin aims to solve these problems through a new type of electrochromic device and materials. The device uses common, low-cost, sustainable building blocks such as amylose, a natural polymer found in corn, potatoes and beans.
"There's an urgent need to develop novel sustainable electrochromic materials and devices with excellent properties for smart windows," said Guihua Yu, a professor in the Cockrell School of Engineering's Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering and the Texas Materials Institute.
"The biomass materials we extracted from corn, potatoes and other common sources enable the achievement of ...
    Read more ...
 

How should Georgia elect key utility regulators? US Supreme Court asked to weigh in:

 
How should Georgia elect key utility regulators? US Supreme Court asked to weigh in - Grist Climate and Energy
Apr 24 · This coverage is made possible through a partnership with WABE and Grist, a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.
In a case that could impact other lawsuits on voting rights, Black voters who sued over Georgia’s elections for key utility regulators are appealing their case to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Those elections for the Georgia Public Service Commission have been on hold for years and while last week a federal appeals court lifted an injunction blocking the elections from taking place, there is little chance the elections will happen this year.
Public Service Commissioners have enormous ...
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How to talk to a climate doomer (even if that doomer is you):

 
How to talk to a climate doomer (even if that doomer is you) - Yale Climate Connections - Communicating
Apr 23 · Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Yale Climate Connections
So someone you love is feeling doomy about climate change. Maybe they’ve experienced a catastrophic storm and know there’s more where that came from. Maybe they lost hope when the latest round of temperature records were shattered. Maybe they think it’s too late to fix the problem (it’s not), or that not enough people care.
Maybe the doomer is you. At least on some days.
To help ease those doomist feelings, we asked a couple of experts for their take: Susan Joy Hassol, the climate communication veteran who served as senior science writer on three ...
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Human Activities Have an Intense Impact on Earth's Deep Subsurface Fluid Flow:

 
Human Activities Have an Intense Impact on Earth's Deep Subsurface Fluid Flow - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · The impact of human activities -- such as greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation -- on Earth's surface have been well-studied. Now, hydrology researchers from the University of Arizona have investigated how humans impact Earth's deep subsurface, a zone that lies hundreds of meters to several kilometers beneath the planet's surface.
"We looked at how the rates of fluid production with oil and gas compare to natural background circulation of water and showed how humans have made a big impact on the circulation of fluids in the subsurface," said Jennifer McIntosh, a professor in the UArizona Department of Hydrology and Atmospheric Sciences and senior author of a paper in the ...
    Read more ...
 

Hurricanes Jeopardize Carbon-Storing New England Forests:

 
Hurricanes Jeopardize Carbon-Storing New England Forests - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · As American companies and public policies strive to mitigate their carbon dioxide emissions, many are relying on carbon offsets to reduce their carbon footprint, especially those who have pledged to achieve "net-zero emissions."
Sequestering carbon in forests is an example of a nature-based solution that is being used to address climate change, but a new study suggests that hurricanes could pose a risk.
Offset programs involve investments organizations or individuals can make in projects that cut carbon emissions, such as solar energy, or that can store carbon, such as preserving and enhancing forests.
As it happens, New England is one of the most heavily forested ...
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Interface Commits to Carbon Negativity, Without Offsets, by 2040:

 
Interface Commits to Carbon Negativity, Without Offsets, by 2040 - Sustainable Brands
Apr 23 · The sustainability leader sets out to hit its climate goals through direct carbon reduction and carbon storage - and challenges industry peers to do the same.
Interface, Inc - a global leader in sustainable flooring solutions - has announced a new focus on direct carbon reduction and carbon storage to meet the urgency of the climate crisis. The company is aligning its strategy to meet its climate commitments without the use of carbon offsets.
As we edge dangerously close to triggering several critical climate tipping points, absolute emission reductions become more and more critical to addressing the crisis. Beginning in 2025, Interface says it will repurpose former ...
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It’s Time to Stop Fanning the Flames of Climate Anxiety:

 
It’s Time to Stop Fanning the Flames of Climate Anxiety - Sustainable Brands
Apr 23 · To all fellow impact professionals, I encourage you to look at the narrative your communications are fueling and consider whether your business, your audience and the planet would benefit from a more nuanced view.
“Global boiling.”
“Two years left to save the world.”
“2023 was the hottest year on record by a long shot.”
Republicans repeal climate projects.
“Climate change costs the global economy $38 trillion a year.”
These are all headlines alarmingly familiar to anyone keeping up with climate news over the last year.
But let me share some highlights you may not have seen:
The Biden administration announced nearly $200 million in ...
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Italy fines Amazon over 'recurring' purchase option:

 
Italy fines Amazon over 'recurring' purchase option - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Italy's competition authority said Wednesday it had fined two Amazon companies 10 million euros ($10.6 million) for unfair commercial practices, for pushing customers into agreeing to "recurring" rather than "one-time" purchases online.
In a statement, the AGCM said the option to set up regular purchases was "pre-selected by default" on a wide selection of products listed on Amazon's Italian website.
"The graphic layout of the pre-selected recurring purchase option may lead consumers to buy products periodically - even when there is no actual need - thereby limiting their ability to choose freely," the AGCM said in a statement.
"Moreover, the conduct implemented by ...
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Japan's moon lander wasn't built to survive a weekslong lunar night. It's still going after 3:

 
Japan's moon lander wasn't built to survive a weekslong lunar night. It's still going after 3 - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Japan's first moon lander has survived a third freezing lunar night, Japan's space agency said Wednesday after receiving an image from the device three months after it landed on the moon.
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said the lunar probe responded to a signal from the earth Tuesday night, confirming it has survived another weekslong lunar night.
Temperatures can fall to minus 170 degrees Celsius (minus 274 degrees Fahrenheit) during a lunar night, and rise to around 100 Celsius (212 Fahrenheit) during a lunar day.
The probe, Smart Lander for Investing Moon, or SLIM, reached the lunar surface on Jan. 20, making Japan the fifth country to successfully place ...
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Lakes worldwide are facing a slew of health issues that may become chronic:

 
Lakes worldwide are facing a slew of health issues that may become chronic - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · In a new study, published in Earth's Future, researchers suggest using human health terminology and approaches to assess and treat the world's lake system issues. For example, lakes with multiple health problems could be characterized as having "multimorbidity," and regular screenings similar to human checkups could help detect issues in lakes early. These anthropomorphic analogies, the researchers report, may help people better connect with and protect nature.
Some high-income countries have methods to assess lake health, but the team introduced a global classification system modeled after the World Health Organization's human health classification system.
They used ...
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Laser-treated cork absorbs oil for carbon-neutral ocean cleanup:

 
Laser-treated cork absorbs oil for carbon-neutral ocean cleanup - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Oil spills are deadly disasters for ocean ecosystems. They can have lasting impacts on fish and marine mammals for decades and wreak havoc on coastal forests, coral reefs, and the surrounding land. Chemical dispersants are often used to break down oil, but they often increase toxicity in the process.
In Applied Physics Letters, researchers from Central South University, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev used laser treatments to transform ordinary cork into a powerful tool for treating oil spills.
They wanted to create a nontoxic, effective oil cleanup solution using materials with a low carbon footprint, but their ...
    Read more ...
 

Laser-Treated Cork Absorbs Oil for Carbon-Neutral Ocean Cleanup:

 
Laser-Treated Cork Absorbs Oil for Carbon-Neutral Ocean Cleanup - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Oil spills are deadly disasters for ocean ecosystems. They can have lasting impacts on fish and marine mammals for decades and wreak havoc on coastal forests, coral reefs, and the surrounding land. Chemical dispersants are often used to break down oil, but they often increase toxicity in the process.
In Applied Physics Letters, by AIP Publishing, researchers from Central South University, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev used laser treatments to transform ordinary cork into a powerful tool for treating oil spills.
They wanted to create a nontoxic, effective oil cleanup solution using materials with a low carbon ...
    Read more ...
 

Leaf size and defensive traits found to modulate effects of soil fauna on litter decomposition:

 
Leaf size and defensive traits found to modulate effects of soil fauna on litter decomposition - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 24 · The work, titled "Effects of leaf size and defensive traits on the contribution of soil fauna to litter decomposition," was published in Forests.
According to the researchers, soil fauna significantly accelerated the decomposition rate across different climate zones (e.g., tropical, subtropical, temperate, and alpine climate zones), ecosystems (e.g., forest, grassland, wetland, and farmland), and litter types (e.g., evergreen woody plants, deciduous woody plants, annual herbs, and perennial herbs).
The combined influence of climate factors (mean annual temperature and precipitation) and litter quality served as a robust predictor of the contribution of soil fauna to ...
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Marginalized Communities Developed 'Disaster Subculture' When Living Through Extreme Climate Events:

 
Marginalized Communities Developed 'Disaster Subculture' When Living Through Extreme Climate Events - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Locations around the globe are experiencing climate disasters on a regular basis. But some of the most marginalized populations experience disasters so often it has come to be normalized.
A new study from the University of Kansas found residents of one Seoul, South Korea, neighborhood have grown so accustomed to living through extreme climate events they have developed a "disaster subculture" that challenges both views of reality and how social agencies can help.
Joonmo Kang, assistant professor of social welfare, spent a year living in Jjokbang-chon, an extremely impoverished neighborhood in Seoul, as part of an ethnographic research project. Residents there routinely ...
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Mechanism of grafting Prunus sp. to control crown gall disease by regulating the rhizosphere environment:

 
Mechanism of grafting Prunus sp. to control crown gall disease by regulating the rhizosphere environment - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 24 · Here, disease-susceptible cherry rootstock 'Gisela 6' and disease-resistant cherry rootstock 'Haiying 1' were grafted onto each other or self-grafted. The effect of their root exudates on the soil microbiome composition and the abundance of pathogenic Agrobacterium were studied.
Grafting onto the disease-resistant rootstock helped to reduce the abundance of pathogenic Agrobacterium, accompanied by altering root exudation, enriching potential beneficial bacteria, and changing functions of the microbiome. The composition of the root exudates from grafted plants was analyzed, and the potential compounds responsible for decreasing pathogenic Agrobacterium abundance were ...
    Read more ...
 

Microsoft and Amazon face scrutiny from UK competition watchdog over recent AI deals:

 
Microsoft and Amazon face scrutiny from UK competition watchdog over recent AI deals - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · British competition regulators said Wednesday they'll scrutinize recent artificial intelligence deals by Microsoft and Amazon over concerns that the moves could thwart competition in the AI industry.
The Competition and Markets Authority said it's looking into Microsoft's partnership with France's Mistral AI and the company's hiring of key staff from another startup, Inflection AI. The watchdog also separately announced that it's investigating Amazon's $4 billion investment in San Francisco-based Anthropic.
Big Tech companies have been pouring money into generative AI startups amid growing public and business interest in the technology, but the investments have also ...
    Read more ...
 

Modeling Broader Effects of Wildfires in Siberia:

 
Modeling Broader Effects of Wildfires in Siberia - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · As wildfires in Siberia become more common, global climate modeling estimates significant impacts on climate, air quality, health, and economies in East Asia and across the northern hemisphere.
The global effects of increasing wildfires in Siberia have been modeled by researchers at Hokkaido University and colleagues at the University of Tokyo and Kyushu University. The results, published in the journal Earth's Future, suggest significant and widespread effects on air quality, climate, health, and economics under the most extreme wildfire scenarios.
The authors performed global numerical simulation experiments to evaluate how the increased intensity of wildfires in ...
    Read more ...
 

Modeling broader effects of wildfires in Siberia:

 
Modeling broader effects of wildfires in Siberia - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · The global effects of increasing wildfires in Siberia have been modeled by researchers at Hokkaido University and colleagues at the University of Tokyo and Kyushu University. The results, published in the journal Earth's Future, suggest significant and widespread effects on air quality, climate, health, and economics under the most extreme wildfire scenarios.
The authors performed global numerical simulation experiments to evaluate how the increased intensity of wildfires in Siberia would affect air quality, premature mortality, and economy through increased atmospheric aerosols (air pollution particles) under the present climate and near-future global warming ...
    Read more ...
 

More support needed to help households transition to green energy, UK research concludes:

 
More support needed to help households transition to green energy, UK research concludes - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · New gas boiler installations need to be phased out before 2050 in order for the UK to meet its climate change targets. There are grants of £7,500 available in England and Wales to help with the cost of installing heat pumps.
The study draws on data from deliberative workshops representing a diversity of geographic and housing contexts across the UK.
Academics found that while participants were open to the fact that there needed to be a move away from fossil fuel use for heating, there were also concerns about the impact such changes might have on their finances as well as the upheaval of retrofitting homes.
No one retrofit measure was seen as preventing ...
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NASA's CloudSat ends mission peering into the heart of clouds:

 
NASA's CloudSat ends mission peering into the heart of clouds - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · CloudSat, a NASA mission that peered into hurricanes, tallied global snowfall rates, and achieved other weather and climate firsts, has ended its operations. Originally proposed as a 22-month mission, the spacecraft was recently decommissioned after almost 18 years observing the vertical structure and ice/water content of clouds.
As planned, the spacecraft - having reached the end of its lifespan and no longer able to make regular observations - was lowered into an orbit last month that will result in its eventual disintegration in the atmosphere.
When launched in 2006, the mission's Cloud Profiling Radar was the first-ever 94 GHz wavelength (W-band) radar to fly in ...
    Read more ...
 

Nearly 2 in 5 Americans breathe unhealthy air. Why it’s getting worse.:

 
Nearly 2 in 5 Americans breathe unhealthy air. Why it’s getting worse. - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 24 · A rising number of Americans - nearly 2 in 5 - has been living with unhealthy levels of air pollution, while the United States experienced a record number of days between 2020 and 2022 with very unhealthy or hazardous air, according to a new report.
More than 90 million people are living in places where the air quality is worse than a new U.S. standard, the American Lung Association reported Wednesday in its annual State of the Air assessment, which detailed a significant increase based on the stricter national particle pollution standard.
The total includes 72 million people who would not have been counted under the looser federal standard - reflecting the dramatic ...
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New algorithm solves century-old problem for coral reef scientists:

 
New algorithm solves century-old problem for coral reef scientists - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · Zachary Ferris, a biological sciences Ph.D. student at Florida Tech, led development of the new computer-vision algorithm called ReScape. ReScape removes the perspective distortion from reefscape images by transforming them into top-down views, thus making all corals the correct size for analysis of reef conditions.
"By recovering the correct size of corals, ReScape allows scientists to begin extracting ecological data from countless coral reefscape images that have been archived for the past 140 years," Ferris said. "Now that this data can be extracted, ReScape also enables scientists to begin using reefscape imaging to conduct more extensive surveys because reefscape images ...
    Read more ...
 

New Biden Climate Rules Could Shutter Remaining American Coal Plants:

 
New Biden Climate Rules Could Shutter Remaining American Coal Plants - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 25 · Limiting power plant pollution is the last major climate rule expected from President Biden. Donald J. Trump has already vowed to “cancel” it if re-elected.
The Biden administration on Thursday placed the final cornerstone of its plan to tackle climate change: a regulation that would force the nation’s coal-fired power plants to virtually eliminate the planet-warming pollution that they release into the air or shut down.
The regulation from the Environmental Protection Agency requires coal plants in the United States to reduce 90 percent of their greenhouse pollution by 2039, one year earlier than the agency had initially proposed. The compressed timeline was welcomed by ...
| By Lisa Friedman and Coral Davenport    Read more ...
 

New insights lead to better next-gen solar cells:

 
New insights lead to better next-gen solar cells - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Saliba and Malekshahi reached out to researchers at the Molecular Foundry, a Department of Energy Office of Science user facility located at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).
Fast forward several months, and the Berkeley Lab team has applied a set of techniques to reveal changes in the crystalline structures of perovskite solar cell materials in real-time as they were being fabricated with Saliba's process. The results, published in a recent Advanced Materials paper, provide researchers with a deeper understanding of how to make better perovskite solar cells.
"Material fabrication is often a black box," said Carolin Sutter-Fella, a Molecular Foundry ...
    Read more ...
 

New Research for Week #17 2024:

 
New Research for Week #17 2024 - Skeptical Science
Apr 25 · Ice acceleration and rotation in the Greenland Ice Sheet interior in recent decades, Løkkegaard et al., Communications Earth & Environment:
In the past two decades, mass loss from the Greenland ice sheet has accelerated, partly due to the speedup of glaciers. However, uncertainty in speed derived from satellite products hampers the detection of inland changes. In-situ measurements using stake surveys or GPS have lower uncertainties. To detect inland changes, we repeated in-situ measurements of ice-sheet surface velocities at 11 historical locations first measured in 1959, located upstream of Jakobshavn Isbræ, west Greenland. Here, we show ice velocities have ...
    Read more ...
 

New rules will slash air, water and climate pollution from U.S. power plants:

 
New rules will slash air, water and climate pollution from U.S. power plants - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 25 · The Environmental Protection Agency on Thursday finalized an ambitious set of rules aimed at slashing air pollution, water pollution and planet-warming emissions spewing from the nation’s power plants.
If fully implemented, the rules will have enormous consequences for U.S. climate goals, the air Americans breathe and the ways they get their electricity. The power sector ranks as the nation’s second-largest contributor to climate change, and it is a major source of toxic air pollutants tied to health problems.
Before the restrictions take effect, however, they will have to survive near-certain legal challenges from Republican attorneys general, who have been emboldened ...
    Read more ...
 

New survey finds positive perceptions of solar projects:

 
New survey finds positive perceptions of solar projects - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Among these respondents, 42% support additional development in their community, compared to 18% who would oppose further projects. At the same time, more than 80% of the respondents were unaware of the project prior to construction and a third did not know until completing the survey.
Doug Bessette, associate professor for energy systems in the Department of Community Sustainability at Michigan State University's College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, was one of the leads on the project.
"The responses from residents were generally positive, which is good to see considering the amount of solar that is likely to be developed in the coming years," Bessette said. "At ...
    Read more ...
 

No Bull: How Creating Less-Gassy Cows Could Help Fight Climate Change:

 
No Bull: How Creating Less-Gassy Cows Could Help Fight Climate Change - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A Curtin University study has revealed breeding less-flatulent cows and restoring agricultural land could significantly reduce rising methane emission levels, which play a considerable role in climate change.
The food system, including grazing animals such as cows, generates major sources of methane mainly due to cattle digestion, manure decomposition and land use for grazing.
To look for solutions, researchers from the Curtin University Sustainability Policy Institute analysed 27 academic publications and identified dozens of potential strategies to reduce methane emissions from Australia's beef and dairy sectors.
Study lead Merideth Kelliher said the fastest way ...
    Read more ...
 

No more funding forests in Cambodia: Interface is ending offsets to go carbon-negative:

 
No more funding forests in Cambodia: Interface is ending offsets to go carbon-negative - Greenbiz
Apr 24 · The carpet company says its carbon-negative manufacturing means it can stop buying CO2 credits.
Instead of investing in offsets, Interface is looking to innovations internally and in its supply chain. Credit: GreenBiz/Sophia Davirro
Interface, the maker of technically innovative commercial carpet tiling, will stop paying for carbon offsets - which typically fund forest projects in developing countries - to reduce the impact of its greenhouse gas emissions.
Instead, starting in 2025, Interface will direct what it used to spend on offsets toward exploring manufacturing with raw materials that remove or store carbon, in hopes of becoming carbon-negative by 2040 - a ...
| By Elsa Wenzel    Read more ...
 

Nobel Prize-winning economist calls for climate tax on billionaires:

 
Nobel Prize-winning economist calls for climate tax on billionaires - Heated World
Apr 24 · For the first time, the world’s most powerful countries are considering a proposal that would tax the super rich and send the money directly to the people on the front lines of the climate crisis.
The proposed climate tax is the brainchild of Nobel Prize-winning economist Esther Duflo, who presented it to the Group of 20 summit in Washington D.C. last Wednesday. Duflo suggested taxing global corporations and the world’s top billionaires to raise money for climate adaptation in countries that are most impacted by the climate crisis. The funds would be directly sent to the poorest individuals in those countries to help them prepare for climate disasters.
“Richer citizens ...
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Peak COP? UN looks to shrink Baku and Belém climate summits:

 
Peak COP? UN looks to shrink Baku and Belém climate summits - Climate Change News - Politics
Apr 24 · While 84,000 delegates attended COP28 in Dubai, just 40,000-50,000 are expected at COP29 in Baku and COP30 in Belém
Some of Indonesia's delegation arrive at Cop28 in Dubai (Photos: Kiara Worth)
UN climate chief Simon Stiell has said he hopes to see fewer people attend the annual COP climate negotiations after participants at COP28 in Dubai last December hit a record high of nearly 84,000.
Stiell said this month that he personally “would certainly like to see future COPs reduce in size”, telling an audience at London’s Chatham House think-tank that “bigger doesn’t necessarily mean better”.
In Dubai, where the 2023 summit was held from November 30 to ...
| By Alice Martins Morais, Matteo Civillini and Joe Lo    Read more ...
 

Planting trees in grasslands won't save the planet - instead, protect and restore forests:

 
Planting trees in grasslands won't save the planet - instead, protect and restore forests - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · They include agroforestry initiatives such as the Great Green Wall in the Sahel, or commercial timber plantations that double as carbon offset projects. These target millions of hectares in countries like Mozambique, Madagascar and Rwanda.
I am part of a team of ecologists and social scientists who are working to highlight the International Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists in 2026. Our goal is to protect and promote rangelands that combat desertification and support economic growth, resilient livelihoods and the sustainable development of pastoralism. In pursuit of this goal, we reviewed all the scientific studies we could find on the effects of planting trees in ...
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Plasma treatment enhances electrode material for fuel cells in industry, homes and vehicles:

 
Plasma treatment enhances electrode material for fuel cells in industry, homes and vehicles - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 22 · These are a promising technology for cleaner and more efficient electrical power generation. Published in the Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry, the study even shows that the cheaper-to-make air plasma is better-suited for processing the carbon material than pure nitrogen or oxygen plasma.
One way to make burning natural gas cleaner is to use fuel cells. These are devices that technically do not burn the fuel but rather oxidize it in a different manner. That process is friendlier to the environment, because it produces more useful power, less greenhouse gases and emits no pollutants such as nitrogen oxides, sulfur dioxide, and aerosol particles.
Fuel cells are used ...
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Positive Perceptions of Solar Projects:

 
Positive Perceptions of Solar Projects - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · As solar energy development accelerates, how do Americans actually feel about those large scale solar, or LSS, farms they see along the highway or near their neighborhood? A new survey has found that for residents living within three miles of a large-scale solar development, positive attitudes outnumbered negative attitudes by almost a 3-to-1 margin.
Among these respondents, 42% support additional development in their community, compared to 18% who would oppose further projects. At the same time, more than 80% of the respondents were unaware of the project prior to construction and a third did not know until completing the survey.
Doug Bessette, associate professor for ...
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Record electron temperatures for a small-scale, sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch fusion device achieved:

 
Record electron temperatures for a small-scale, sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch fusion device achieved - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Due to the electrons' ability to rapidly cool a plasma, this feat is a key hurdle for fusion systems and FuZE is the simplest, smallest and lowest cost device to have achieved it. Zap's technology offers the potential for a much shorter and more practical path to a commercial product capable of producing abundant, on-demand, carbon-free energy to the globe.
"These are meticulous, unequivocal measurements, yet made on a device of incredibly modest scale by traditional fusion standards," describes Ben Levitt, VP of R&D at Zap. "We've still got a lot of work ahead of us, but our performance to date has advanced to a point that we can now stand shoulder to shoulder with some of ...
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Researchers develop forest extent map for Mexico:

 
Researchers develop forest extent map for Mexico - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · One of the challenges facing researchers when it comes to evaluating the accuracy of forest extent, however, is that models use different remote sensing products that may have different definitions for what determines forest extent. In addition, on the ground surveys may sometimes come into conflict with what remote, satellite-based products are describing as forests.
To help quantify this problem, a group of researchers from the University of Delaware teamed up with an international group of collaborators. Together, they looked at forest extent estimates from seven regional and global land or tree cover remote sensing products across Mexico, using two independent forest ...
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Researchers develop high-energy-density aqueous battery based on halogen multi-electron transfer:

 
Researchers develop high-energy-density aqueous battery based on halogen multi-electron transfer - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · Aqueous batteries use water as the solvent for electrolytes, significantly enhancing the safety of the batteries. However, due to the limited solubility of the electrolyte and low battery voltage, aqueous batteries typically have a lower energy density. This means that the amount of electricity stored per unit volume of aqueous battery is relatively low.
In a study published in Nature Energy, a research group led by Prof. Li Xianfeng from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), in collaboration with Prof. Fu Qiang's group also from DICP, developed a multi-electron transfer cathode based on bromine and iodine, realizing a ...
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Researchers Find Oldest Undisputed Evidence of Earth's Magnetic Field:

 
Researchers Find Oldest Undisputed Evidence of Earth's Magnetic Field - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A new study, led by the University of Oxford and MIT, has recovered a 3.7-billion-year-old record of Earth's magnetic field, and found that it appears remarkably similar to the field surrounding Earth today. The findings have been published today in the Journal of Geophysical Research.
Without its magnetic field, life on Earth would not be possible since this shields us from harmful cosmic radiation and charged particles emitted by the Sun (the 'solar wind'). But up to now, there has been no reliable date for when the modern magnetic field was first established.
In the new study, the researchers examined an ancient sequence of iron-containing rocks from Isua, Greenland. ...
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Researchers find oldest undisputed evidence of Earth's magnetic field:

 
Researchers find oldest undisputed evidence of Earth's magnetic field - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · A new study, led by the University of Oxford and MIT, has recovered a 3.7-billion-year-old record of Earth's magnetic field, and found that it appears remarkably similar to the field surrounding Earth today. The findings have been published in the Journal of Geophysical Research.
Without its magnetic field, life on Earth would not be possible since this shields us from harmful cosmic radiation and charged particles emitted by the sun (the 'solar wind'). But up to now, there has been no reliable date for when the modern magnetic field was first established.
In the study, the researchers examined an ancient sequence of iron-containing rocks from Isua, Greenland. Iron ...
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Researchers propose a new method for wind turbine blade recycling:

 
Researchers propose a new method for wind turbine blade recycling - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 23 · Wind turbine blades play a crucial role in harnessing renewable energy but as these blades reach the end of their operational lifespan, the issue of disposal becomes a serious concern.
Made from composite materials, such as layers of fiberglass or carbon fiber reinforced with epoxy or polyester resin, these wind turbine blades can be used for 20 to 25 years. While these materials ensure the strength, lightness, and stiffness of turbine blades, they also significantly complicate the recycling of the equipment.
Pyrolysis: A promising strategy for wind turbine blade recycling
However, until a few years ago, wind turbine blades were almost impossible to recycle. ...
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Revolutionizing agriculture for a sustainable future:

 
Revolutionizing agriculture for a sustainable future - Greenbiz
Apr 24 · Sponsored: Agoro Carbon redefines agriculture's climate role by offering quality carbon credits and focusing on regenerative practices.
Regenerative Agriculture, a solution to Climate Change. Image courtesy of Agoro Carbon.
This article is sponsored by Agoro Carbon.
The climate clock is ticking, and immediate action is necessary, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Agriculture must transition from being part of the problem to being a cornerstone of the solution. As the ongoing story of sustainability unfolds, agriculture is a key player and potential hero.
At Agoro Carbon, we are actively working to make this narrative a ...
| By Dylan Lubbe    Read more ...
 

Rubber-like stretchable energy storage device fabricated with laser precision:

 
Rubber-like stretchable energy storage device fabricated with laser precision - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · The advent of wearable technology has brought with it a pressing need for energy storage solutions that can keep pace with the flexibility and stretchability of soft electronic devices. Micro supercapacitors (MSCs) have emerged as a promising candidate for deformable energy storage, due to high-power density, rapid charging, and long cycle life.
However, the fabrication of interdigitated electrode patterns capable of maintaining the energy storage performance under repeated stretching and twisting has remained a great challenge, because brittle materials like gold (Au) have been commonly used as an electrode. Meanwhile, though eutectic gallium-indium liquid metal (EGaIn) has ...
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Salt battery harvests osmotic energy where the river meets the sea:

 
Salt battery harvests osmotic energy where the river meets the sea - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Estuaries - where freshwater rivers meet the salty sea - are great locations for birdwatching and kayaking. In these areas, waters containing different salt concentrations mix and may be sources of sustainable, "blue" osmotic energy.
Osmotic energy can be generated anywhere salt gradients are found, but the available technologies to capture this renewable energy have room for improvement. One method uses an array of reverse electrodialysis (RED) membranes that act as a sort of "salt battery," generating electricity from pressure differences caused by the salt gradient.
To even out that gradient, positively charged ions from seawater, such as sodium, flow through the ...
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Scientists demonstrate high-resolution lidar sees birth zone of cloud droplets, a first-ever remote observation:

 
Scientists demonstrate high-resolution lidar sees birth zone of cloud droplets, a first-ever remote observation - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · "We are interested in this 'droplet activation zone,' where most cloud droplets are initially formed at the cloud base, because the number of droplets formed there will affect the later stages and properties of the cloud—including how much sunlight a cloud reflects and the likelihood of precipitation," said Brookhaven atmospheric scientist Fan Yang, the first author on the paper.
"If there are more aerosols in the atmosphere, clouds tend to have more droplets, but the droplets will each be smaller, which means they can reflect more sunlight," Yang said. "This might help to cool our warming Earth," he noted.
But to accurately predict the impacts of these ...
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Scientists map soil RNA to fungal genomes to understand forest ecosystems:

 
Scientists map soil RNA to fungal genomes to understand forest ecosystems - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · This way, the fungi of forest soils hold keys to tree health and carbon storage—skills that matter increasingly as the climate warms. However, these are complicated interactions to untangle. Fungi work in cooperation to support a forest, and species vary across Earth's ecosystems.
Recently, in work published in New Phytologist, researchers have pioneered new understanding of which fungi take on certain functions at the forest floor. For the first time, they compared three different fungal guilds in a range of different locations. They sampled soils in four forest ecosystems, extracted RNA to understand gene expression, and developed new tools to map that soil RNA to ...
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Securing competitiveness of energy-intensive industries through relocation: The pulling power of renewables:

 
Securing competitiveness of energy-intensive industries through relocation: The pulling power of renewables - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · This 'renewables pull' would create strong incentives for businesses to invest in low-emission production facilities in these renewable-rich countries. Renewable-scarce countries could put all focus on down-stream production and refinement as the smart way to secure industrial competitiveness.
"Our new study shows that renewable-scarce countries like parts of the EU, Japan and South Korea could save between 18 to 38 percent in production costs," explains Philipp Verpoort, scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and lead author of the study published in Nature Energy.
"They could do so by relocating their production of industrial basic ...
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Share of electricity generated by fossil fuels in Great Britain drops to record low:

 
Share of electricity generated by fossil fuels in Great Britain drops to record low - Guardian - Energy
Apr 2 · Gas and coal accounted for just 2.4% of power generation for an hour last week, data shows, amid 'zero-carbon grid’ plans
The share of Great Britain’s electricity generated by burning fossil fuels plummeted to unprecedented lows this month, ahead of plans to begin running a “zero-carbon grid” for short periods from next year.
Electricity generated by burning gas and coal fell to a record low of just 2.4% for an hour at lunchtime on Monday 15 April, according to an analysis of data from National Grid’s electricity system operator (ESO).
The same data has revealed that earlier this month the share of fossil fuels in the generation mix taken over an entire day fell to ...
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Shoreline Model Predicts Long-Term Future of Storm Protection and Sea-Level Rise:

 
Shoreline Model Predicts Long-Term Future of Storm Protection and Sea-Level Rise - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · "Coastal management strategies intended to protect people, property and infrastructure from storm impacts can, over decades, increase vulnerability, even leading to the loss of barrier islands, especially as sea-level rise rates increase," said A. Brad Murray, professor of geomorphology and coastal processes at Duke University's Nicholas School of the Environment.
He and other researchers in North Carolina created a computer model that simulates dynamics of barrier island systems over the next two centuries, showing how natural processes that create and maintain these systems affect communities and infrastructure, and how human efforts to protect communities and ...
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Shoreline model predicts long-term future of storm protection and sea-level rise:

 
Shoreline model predicts long-term future of storm protection and sea-level rise - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · "Coastal management strategies intended to protect people, property and infrastructure from storm impacts can, over decades, increase vulnerability, even leading to the loss of barrier islands, especially as sea-level rise rates increase," said A. Brad Murray, professor of geomorphology and coastal processes at Duke University's Nicholas School of the Environment.
He and other researchers in North Carolina created a computer model that simulates dynamics of barrier island systems over the next two centuries, showing how natural processes that create and maintain these systems affect communities and infrastructure, and how human efforts to protect communities and ...
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Single-walled carbon nanotubes doped with 'nitrogen' enhance the performance of secondary battery anode:

 
Single-walled carbon nanotubes doped with 'nitrogen' enhance the performance of secondary battery anode - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Silicon, despite offering significantly higher energy density compared to graphite (a common anode material), suffers from a major drawback: it expands 3-4 times during charging and discharging, leading to performance degradation. To address this issue, researchers are blending silicon with graphite to balance their strengths and weaknesses.
To maximize silicon content and overcome its limitations, the Korea Electrotechnology Research Institute (KERI) has utilized nitrogen-doped single-walled carbon nanotubes and graphene. Single-walled carbon nanotubes, being thinner and more conductive than multi-walled ones, present challenges in dispersion due to their small diameter. ...
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Solar Climate Intervention Virtual Symposium 10 (Dr. Ilaria Quaglia & Dr. Wake Smith):

 
Solar Climate Intervention Virtual Symposium 10 (Dr. Ilaria Quaglia & Dr. Wake Smith) - Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist)
Apr 24 · Solar Climate Intervention Virtual Symposium 10\n\nDr. Ilaria Quaglia (Cornell University, USA): | By Solar Climate Intervention Talks    Read more ...
 

Solar geoengineering: Can it solve the climate crisis?:

 
Solar geoengineering: Can it solve the climate crisis? - Climate Engineering (Lockley - Playlist)
Apr 23 · On top of cutting down on emissions, solar geoengineering is being touted as an alternative approach to slow global warming — but it is also an unproven technology. \n\nDebate is especially growing about stratospheric aerosol injection, a type of solar geoengineering which could someday help slow the effects of climate change. \n\nEric Sorensen explains the science, benefits and concerns of this potential solution to the climate crisis.\n\nFor more info, please go to https://globalnews.ca\nSubscribe to Global News Channel HERE: http://bit.ly/20fcXDc\nLike Global News on Facebook HERE: http://bit.ly/255GMJQ\nFollow Global News on Twitter HERE: http://bit.ly/1Toz8mt\nFollow Global News ... | By Global News    Read more ...
 

Spintronics research shows material's magnetic properties can predict how a spin current changes with temperature:

 
Spintronics research shows material's magnetic properties can predict how a spin current changes with temperature - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Spintronics exploits the intrinsic spin of electrons, and fundamental to the field is controlling the flows of the spin degree of freedom, i.e., spin currents. Scientists are focused on ways to create, remove, and control them for future applications.
Detecting spin currents is no easy feat. It requires the use of macroscopic voltage measurement, which looks at the overall voltage changes across a material. However, a common stumbling block has been a lack of understanding as to how this spin current actually moves or propagates within the material itself.
A team of researchers now report a method to predict how spin current changes with temperature. The study is ...
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Squids' birthday influences mating: Male spear squids shown to become 'sneakers' or 'consorts' depending on birth date:

 
Squids' birthday influences mating: Male spear squids shown to become 'sneakers' or 'consorts' depending on birth date - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Understanding how mating tactics are influenced by birth date, and the environmental conditions at that time, can help researchers consider how squid might be affected by climate change and the implications for marine resource management.
What does your date of birth say about you? Maybe you feel it reveals something about your personality, or perhaps even your destiny. For male spear squid, it can tell us a lot about their love life.
A team of researchers in Japan have found that the mating tactics of spear squid are heavily influenced by the day they were born. These squid can be classified into two types according to their mating techniques: consorts, which fight off ...
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State's new law involving Puget Sound Energy aspires to set a course for the future:

 
State's new law involving Puget Sound Energy aspires to set a course for the future - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Over the past couple of years, Washington lawmakers have wrestled with a daunting task.
The problem: The state's largest utility, Puget Sound Energy, sells natural gas to nearly 1 million customers and burns gas and coal to electrify cities. That contributes millions of metric tons of planet-warming gases to the atmosphere.
It makes PSE one of the largest producers of greenhouse gas pollution in the state, ranked among fuel suppliers like Marathon, BP and Philips 66. And it represents a huge threat to the state's ambitious climate goals.
Lawmakers' original proposed fix would have been unprecedented in the country and required PSE to stop offering new commercial ...
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Storing and utilizing energy with innovative sulfur-based cathodes:

 
Storing and utilizing energy with innovative sulfur-based cathodes - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Sulfur is a sustainable alternative to the materials commonly used in lithium-ion batteries because it is less toxic and—unlike cobalt—is abundant. However, the storage capacity of batteries in which sulfur is used as a cathode material has so far declined rapidly.
"Our development paves the way for sulfur electrodes as a viable alternative to conventional metal-based cathodes. It could fundamentally change the way we store and use energy and represents an important step towards a more sustainable future," explains Prof Bojdys.
Solving the sulfur-shuttle problem using polymer chemistry
With sulfur-based cathodes, the mobility of the sulfur has so far ...
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Study finds climate change is helping tropical fish invade Australian ocean water:

 
Study finds climate change is helping tropical fish invade Australian ocean water - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · A University of Adelaide study of shallow-water fish communities on rocky reefs in south-eastern Australia has found climate change is helping tropical fish species invade temperate Australian waters. The work is published in the Journal of Animal Ecology.
"The fish are traveling into these Australian ecosystems as larvae caught in the Eastern Australian Current, which is strengthening due to the warming climate," said the University of Adelaide's Professor Ivan Nagelkerken, Chief Investigator of the study.
"These larvae would not normally survive in the cooler Australian ocean water, but the warming Eastern Australian Current keeps the baby fish warm and increases their ...
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Study shows it's not too late to save the West Antarctic Ice Sheet:

 
Study shows it's not too late to save the West Antarctic Ice Sheet - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · More than 5 meters of potential global sea-level rise is locked within the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, so understanding whether the regions of the ice sheet that appear "stable" today might melt in the future is critical for forecasting how much and how fast our seas will rise around the world.
One such region that is currently stable is West Antarctica's Siple Coast, where rivers of ice flow over the continent and drain into the Ross Sea. This ice flow is slowed down by the Ross Ice Shelf, a floating mass of ice nearly the size of Spain, which serves as a buttress to the ice sheet glaciers. Compared to other ice shelves in West Antarctica, the Ross Ice Shelf has very little ...
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Study shows potential of super grids when hurricanes overshadow solar panels:

 
Study shows potential of super grids when hurricanes overshadow solar panels - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Caribbean islands are starting to shift away from importing expensive fossil fuels, using instead their own abundant sun and wind to make electricity. However, their frequent hurricanes can put a damper on solar energy generation. Researchers at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory developed a comprehensive modeling method to predict the drop in electricity generation better when these storm clouds overshadow solar panels.
The team explored ways to compensate for these energy losses with super grids, a collection of grids connected so electricity can flow across island chains or between continents.
The historically underserved island residents can't ...
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SUPPORT! Nakivale: Refugee-Led Biochar Enterprise in Uganda.:

 
SUPPORT! Nakivale: Refugee-Led Biochar Enterprise in Uganda. - Open Air (Carbon Capture)
Apr 23 · Farmer entrepreneurs in Nakivale, Uganda, Africa's oldest refugee settlement, are on the brink of taking their biochar production from pilot to sustainable business. With your generous help we can help them get there, improving deteriorated soil, reducing food insecurity and removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.\n\nIn 2023, OpenAir members all over the world helped crowdfund phase 1 of this project, funding the manufacture and installation of three biochar kilns in Nakivale. Since that time, the team has been recruited and trained, a regular supply of local waste biomass has been secured, and production has been ramping up daily for several months.\n\nThis amazing progress owes ... | By OpenAir    Read more ...
 

Talks on global plastic treaty begin in Canada:

 
Talks on global plastic treaty begin in Canada - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Negotiators from 175 nations began talks Tuesday on a proposed global treaty to reduce plastic pollution, which is found everywhere from mountain tops to ocean depths, and in human blood and breast milk.
"The world is counting on us to deliver a new treaty that will catalyze and guide the actions and international cooperation needed to deliver a future free of plastic pollution," said Luis Valdivieso, chair of the negotiations at the UN-led talks in Ottawa, Canada.
"Let's not fail," Valdivieso added as he opened the session that will run to April 29.
Nations agreed in 2022 to finalize a world-first treaty by the end of 2024, with concrete measures to battle plastic ...
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Tesla 1Q profit falls 55%, but stock jumps as company moves to speed production of cheaper vehicles:

 
Tesla 1Q profit falls 55%, but stock jumps as company moves to speed production of cheaper vehicles - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Tesla's first-quarter net income plummeted 55%, but its stock price surged in after-hours trading Tuesday as the company said it would move up production of new, more affordable vehicles.
The Austin, Texas, company said it made $1.13 billion from January through March compared with $2.51 billion in the same period a year ago.
Investors and analysts were looking to the earnings release for some sign that Tesla will move to end a stock slide this year and reverse the sales decline. The company did that in a letter to investors Tuesday, saying that production of smaller, more affordable models will start in the second half next year, ahead of previous guidance.
The ...
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Tesla driver in Seattle-area crash that killed motorcyclist told police he was using Autopilot:

 
Tesla driver in Seattle-area crash that killed motorcyclist told police he was using Autopilot - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 25 · A Tesla that may have been operating on the company's Autopilot driving system hit and killed a motorcyclist near Seattle, raising questions about whether a recent recall went far enough to ensure Tesla drivers using Autopilot pay attention to the road.
After the crash Friday in a suburban area about 15 miles (24 kilometers) northeast of the city, the driver of a 2022 Tesla Model S told a Washington State Patrol trooper that he was using Autopilot and looked at his cellphone while the Tesla was moving.
"The next thing he knew there was a bang and the vehicle lurched forward as it accelerated and collided with the motorcycle in front of him," the trooper wrote in a ...
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The big quantum chill: Scientists modify common lab refrigerator to cool faster with less energy:

 
The big quantum chill: Scientists modify common lab refrigerator to cool faster with less energy - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · The scientists say that their prototype device, which they are now working to commercialize with an industrial partner, could annually save an estimated 27 million watts of power, $30 million in global electricity consumption, and enough cooling water to fill 5,000 Olympic swimming pools.
From stabilizing qubits (the basic unit of information in a quantum computer) to maintaining the superconducting properties of materials and keeping NASA's James Webb Space Telescope cool enough to observe the heavens, ultracold refrigeration is essential to the operation of many devices and sensors. For decades, the pulse tube refrigerator (PTR) has been the workhorse device for achieving ...
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The corporate-startup handoff is broken. Here’s how to fix it.:

 
The corporate-startup handoff is broken. Here’s how to fix it. - Greenbiz
Apr 24 · Corporations can be vital supporters and partners for climate-tech startups.
Corporations need to align incentives and up their risk tolerance to work more effectively with startups. Source: sirtravelalot via Shutterstock
Successful startup-corporate partnerships - the full adoption of startup tech or integration into a corporation's business unit - are a relatively rare outcome. Corporate executives want to know how startup adoption will help their bottom line: will it open new markets and increase efficiency? Is it relatively easy to adopt?
Even when there is a good match, the transition often gets lost in corporate friction and complexity, due to either ...
| By Jake Mitchell    Read more ...
 

The high and mighty Himalayas: A biodiversity hotbed facing significant challenges:

 
The high and mighty Himalayas: A biodiversity hotbed facing significant challenges - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 24 · The region represents a huge mountain system extending 2,400 kilometers across Nepal, India, Bhutan, Pakistan, China, Myanmar and Afghanistan. It has a number of climate types and ecological zones, from tropical to alpine ecosystems including ice and rocks in the uppermost zone. All these ecological zones are compressed within a short elevation span.
The Himalayas—along with the related Tibetan Plateau—provide considerable ecosystem services and as the "third pole" are also the source of most of Asia's major rivers, a fact that has earned it the additional moniker of "the world's water tower."
It is of urgent importance that these fragile ecosystems are ...
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This Is One Of The Biggest Threats To Democracy - And It’s 'Underappreciated’:

 
This Is One Of The Biggest Threats To Democracy - And It’s 'Underappreciated’ - Huffington Post
Apr 24 · In May 2019, I flew to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to attend a conference on the future of carbon capture, the technology the oil industry was betting on to slash the climate impact of burning fossil fuels. Just six months after the release of a dire report giving humanity roughly a decade to halve emissions that were then still growing year over year, I braced myself for what I expected to be a roomful of unreformed climate deniers.
Instead, I spent most of two days listening to conversations detailing the surprisingly complex reality: technologies to keep carbon from leaving smokestacks and entering the atmosphere could actually work.
In particular, I heard Akshat Rathi, an ...
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This Salt Battery Harvests Osmotic Energy Where the River Meets the Sea:

 
This Salt Battery Harvests Osmotic Energy Where the River Meets the Sea - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Estuaries -- where freshwater rivers meet the salty sea -- are great locations for birdwatching and kayaking. In these areas, waters containing different salt concentrations mix and may be sources of sustainable, "blue" osmotic energy. Researchers in ACS Energy Letters report creating a semipermeable membrane that harvests osmotic energy from salt gradients and converts it to electricity. The new design had an output power density more than two times higher than commercial membranes in lab demonstrations.
Osmotic energy can be generated anywhere salt gradients are found, but the available technologies to capture this renewable energy have room for improvement. One method uses ...
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Thousands in heatwave-hit Bangladesh pray for rain:

 
Thousands in heatwave-hit Bangladesh pray for rain - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Thousands of Bangladeshis gathered to pray for rain on Wednesday in the middle of an extreme heat wave that prompted authorities to shut down schools around the country.
Extensive scientific research has found climate change is causing heat waves to become longer, more frequent and more intense.
Bangladesh's weather bureau says that average maximum temperatures in the capital Dhaka over the past week have been 4-5 degrees Celsius (7.2-9 degrees Fahrenheit) higher than the 30-year average for the same period.
Muslim worshippers gathered in city mosques and rural fields to pray for relief from the scorching heat, which forecasters expect to continue for at least ...
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Tropical Fish Are Invading Australian Ocean Water:

 
Tropical Fish Are Invading Australian Ocean Water - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · A University of Adelaide study of shallow-water fish communities on rocky reefs in south-eastern Australia has found climate change is helping tropical fish species invade temperate Australian waters.
"The fish are travelling into these Australian ecosystems as larvae caught in the Eastern Australian Current, which is strengthening due to the warming climate," said the University of Adelaide's Professor Ivan Nagelkerken, Chief Investigator of the study.
"These larvae would not normally survive in the cooler Australian ocean water, but the warming Eastern Australian Current keeps the baby fish warm and increases their likelihood of survival."
The novel populations ...
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U.S. solar companies, imperiled by price collapse, demand protection:

 
U.S. solar companies, imperiled by price collapse, demand protection - Washington Post - Climate and Environment
Apr 24 · Several of the biggest American solar manufacturing companies are demanding aggressive action against cheap imports, arguing in a petition filed Wednesday with the Commerce Department that firms in four Asian countries are illegally flooding the U.S. market with Chinese-subsidized panels.
Though the panels are not produced in China, the petitioners allege many are made in factories linked to Chinese-based companies that benefit from massive price supports.
The complaint comes amid a glut of solar panels on the global market that has driven prices down by 50 percent over the past year, with the International Energy Agency projecting prices will fall even further. ...
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Ultra-thin, flexible solar cells demonstrate their promise in a commercial quadcopter drone:

 
Ultra-thin, flexible solar cells demonstrate their promise in a commercial quadcopter drone - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · Conventional energy solutions—including fossil fuels, batteries and other alternative energy generation methods—have their challenges. For example, they are either often too large, require cables or stationary charging, negatively impact on the environment, or their power density is too low.
Ultra-thin and flexible solar cells made from a new material called "perovskite" are proving to be an efficient and lightweight solution to facilitate self-sufficient energy generation over extended periods of time.
As part of a groundbreaking development, researchers at the JKU have now succeeded in developing ultra-lightweight quasi-2D perovskite solar cells with an ...
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UN launches fund to shield displaced people from climate shocks:

 
UN launches fund to shield displaced people from climate shocks - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · The United Nations said Wednesday it was launching a new Climate Resilience Fund aimed at boosting protections for "refugees and displaced communities" threatened by climate change.
The UN refugee agency said it aimed to raise $100 million for the new fund by the end of next year to support refugees, their host communities and countries of origin hardest hit by climate emergencies.
The agency highlighted in a statement that climate risks were "strongly correlated with conflict and poverty", experienced by many refugees.
In 2022, more than 70 percent of refugees and asylum seekers fled from highly climate-vulnerable countries, it pointed out.
"The impacts of ...
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Urgent need for logging loophole remedy within proposed Great Koala National Park:

 
Urgent need for logging loophole remedy within proposed Great Koala National Park - PHYS.ORG - Biology
Apr 23 · Led by Adjunct Senior Research Fellow Timothy Cadman, from Griffith University's Institute for Ethics, Governance and Law, the new report published in The International Journal of Social Quality highlighted exclusion of prime koala habitat from logging within the proposed park was inconsistent with koala protection efforts.
Dr. Cadman said the plans needed to also consider the integrity of the broader reserve habitat system and be accorded the requisite status of World Heritage.
The Great Koala National Park is set to cover 300,000 hectares of state forest and existing national parks from Grafton to Kempsey in Northern New South Wales.
The Park, to act as a safe ...
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Using liquid metal to develop energy storage systems with 100 times better heat transfer:

 
Using liquid metal to develop energy storage systems with 100 times better heat transfer - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · From April 22 to 26, 2024, the researchers will present a model of their energy storage system at the KIT stand at the Energy Solutions (Hall 13, Stand C76) of the Hannover Messe.
Worldwide, high-temperature heat storage systems are being developed to supply resource-intensive production companies with heat independently of fluctuating renewable energy production. These storage systems convert electrical power into heat, which is then stored.
The heat is used if needed, for instance when electricity is expensive and production processes cannot be stopped. The higher the temperature stored, the better. This reduces the amount of additional energy that would be needed to ...
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Victims of China floods race to salvage property:

 
Victims of China floods race to salvage property - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 24 · Victims of severe floods in southern China raced on Wednesday to salvage property from the muddy waters as authorities warned of more heavy rains to come.
Massive downpours have struck Guangdong province in recent days, triggering deluges that have claimed the lives of four people and forced the evacuation of more than 100,000.
The severe floods are virtually unheard of so early in the year even in lush, subtropical Guangdong, with one senior official linking them to worsening climate change.
AFP reporters in Shatang village on Wednesday saw staff and officials at a tourist resort taking advantage of a break in the rain to clear mud from the streets.
"The ...
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Volkswagen revamps its approach in China in bid to overtake upstart EV makers:

 
Volkswagen revamps its approach in China in bid to overtake upstart EV makers - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · As auto giant Volkswagen AG races to catch up with upstart Chinese competitors, it has drivers like 26-year-old Ren Yiling in mind.
She is young and wants to play video games in her car. The digital features of her Zeekr 001, a European-designed electric car from China's Geely Holding Group, appeal to her. She uses her smartphone to help her parents adjust their seats and tells an animated voice assistant to open the window or play music.
"I once sung karaoke in the car when travelling a long way with my family," she said. "To me, the car is more like an entertainment place. I am a singer."
Foreign automakers have been caught flat-footed in China by an electric ...
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Warming Climate Is Putting More Metals Into Colorado's Mountain Streams:

 
Warming Climate Is Putting More Metals Into Colorado's Mountain Streams - Science Daily - Earth and Climate
Apr 24 · Warming temperatures are causing a steady rise in copper, zinc and sulfate in the waters of Colorado mountain streams affected by acid rock drainage. Concentrations of these metals have roughly doubled in these alpine streams over the past 30 years, a new study finds, presenting a concern for ecosystems, downstream water quality and mining remediation.
Natural chemical weathering of bedrock is the source of the rising acidity and metals, but the ultimate driver of the trend is climate change, the report found.
"Heavy metals are a real challenge for ecosystems," said lead author Andrew Manning, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver. "Some are quite toxic. ...
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Warming climate is putting more metals into Colorado's mountain streams:

 
Warming climate is putting more metals into Colorado's mountain streams - PHYS.ORG - Earth
Apr 23 · Natural chemical weathering of bedrock is the source of the rising acidity and metals, but the ultimate driver of the trend is climate change, the report found.
"Heavy metals are a real challenge for ecosystems," said lead author Andrew Manning, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver. "Some are quite toxic. We are seeing regional, statistically significant trends in copper and zinc, two key metals that are commonly a problem in Colorado. It's not ambiguous, and it's not small."
The study was published in Water Resources Research.
Although the mechanism coupling warming temperatures to increased sulfide weathering is still an open research question, ...
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Water is at the heart of farmers’ struggle to survive in Benin:

 
Water is at the heart of farmers’ struggle to survive in Benin - Skeptical Science
Apr 24 · For the residents of Dassa-Zoumè, a city in the West African country of Benin, choosing between drinking water and having enough food has become a worrying dilemma.
“Last year, our horticultural production plummeted due to water scarcity,” said Chantal Agbangla, a farmer residing in Soclogbo, a town located about 30 minutes by car from the capital of Dassa-Zoumé. “We had to travel nine kilometers to find water, mainly for our agricultural and domestic needs.”
Family farming, a pillar of the economy in Dassa-Zoumè, is more threatened than ever by climate change. Small-scale farms cover only about 2% of cultivable land in the ...
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What are fuel cell EVs?:

 
What are fuel cell EVs? - Yale Climate Connections - Transportation
Apr 24 · Stay in the know about climate impacts and solutions. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Yale Climate Connections
Most electric vehicles on the road today are powered by batteries. But battery EVs are not the only EVs.
Fuel cell EVs run on hydrogen gas, which mixes with oxygen in a chemical reaction to create electricity.
The hydrogen is stored in a tank on board the vehicle.
Terry: “So it’s very much like gassing up a car right now, in that you pull into a station, you attach a nozzle, this time for a high-pressure gas as opposed to a liquid, and you refuel in a matter of minutes.”
Seth Terry is co-founder of New Day Hydrogen, a startup ...
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What Fixed Charges on Your Electric Bill Could Mean for Charging an EV in California:

 
What Fixed Charges on Your Electric Bill Could Mean for Charging an EV in California - Union of Concerned Scientists - Vehicles
Apr 22 · Residential electricity rates for many Californians have increased significantly over the last year, making it more expensive to charge an electric vehicle (EV) at home. It’s still cheaper to recharge an EV than buy gasoline, but those savings have been eroded by surging electric rates.
Prompted by a state law, California’s utility regulator has proposed to change the way electricity is billed by adding a fixed monthly charge to all rate plans and making a corresponding reduction to the cost for each unit of electricity used.
Transportation is the largest sector for climate changing emissions, so it’s important that we transition our cars and trucks from gasoline to ...
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Why Germany ditched nuclear before coal - and why it won't go back:

 
Why Germany ditched nuclear before coal - and why it won't go back - PHYS.ORG - Technology
Apr 24 · In the face of climate change, calls to expedite the transition away from fossil fuels, and an energy crisis precipitated by Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Berlin's move to quit nuclear before carbon-intensive energy sources like coal has attracted significant criticism. (Greta Thunberg prominently labeled it "a mistake.")
This decision can only be understood in the context of post-war socio-political developments in Germany, where anti-nuclearism predated the public climate discourse.
From a 1971 West German bestseller evocatively titled Peaceably into Catastrophe: A Documentation of Nuclear Power Plants, to huge protests of hundreds of thousands—including the ...
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Your most pressing climate questions:

 
Your most pressing climate questions - New York Times - Climate Section
Apr 23 · Subscriber-only Newsletter
Climate Forward
Introducing Ask NYT Climate, where we’ll explore how climate intersects with your everyday life.
I’m the new editor of the Climate Forward newsletter.
Are traffic circles better for the environment than four-way stops? Will the oceans be too hot for fish to survive? Is green hydrogen a thing?
Over the past few years, we here at the Climate desk have received hundreds of smart, often highly specific, questions from our readers about what they can do in their daily lives to affect climate change. To answer some of these questions, this week we’ve launched “Ask NYT Climate,” which is dedicated to exploring how ...
| By Ryan McCarthy    Read more ...
 

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