Read the entire article at The Verge. Cyborg bacteria covered in tiny solar panels can beat plants at photosynthesis, which means they could be key in creating renewable solar fuels. Photosynthesis, or the way plants turn carbon dioxide into oxygen, is crucial for life on Earth — but it’s not a […]
This article, written by Tim Rumage, appeared originally at Planetary Ethicist. The disbanding of the Climate Council1 was an easy story to miss in the last couple of weeks of statutes, protests, Harvey and floods. Even today’s news of the US State Department’s proposed reorganization2 (which functionally demotes discussions on Climate Change and […]
If something is good for the environment, and for people, usually it also makes good business sense. Read the entire article at OZY. Sustainability isn’t just good for the environment, and for our communities, it also makes good business sense. As Head of Property Management for JPMorgan Chase Global Real Estate, I’m responsible for the […]
From Seattle to Cape Cod, see what’s being done at 18 different locations. Read the entire article at Engineering News-Record. In this special report, Engineering News-Record’s team of editors and reporters look at how coastal communities around the country are tackling problems, including erosion, subsidence and sea-level rise. Our reporting has found […]
It had a good run. But the end is in sight for the machine that changed the world. Read the entire article at The Economist. “HUMAN inventiveness…has still not found a mechanical process to replace horses as the propulsion for vehicles,” lamented Le Petit Journal, a French newspaper, in December 1893. Its answer […]
Read the entire article at GreenTech Media. Mexico doesn’t have any grid storage – but that won’t be the case for long. A recent market reform has set the stage for private grid investment. The government wants storage to be a part of it. After decades with a state-owned monopoly utility, Mexico deregulated its […]
Read the entire article at Forbes. Beyond global accords and national policies, market forces are now making clean, renewable power a competitive lower-cost reality. “Numerous key markets have reached an inflection point where renewables will have become the cheapest form of new power generation by 2020, a dynamic we see spreading to nearly every country we […]
Read the entire article at Yale Climate Connections. The insurance system has been strained by huge payouts after devastating storms. So many American homeowners in flood-prone areas are facing more expensive insurance premiums. Filer: “Particularly post-Katrina and post-Sandy, now, insurers are going back in and reevaluating the risk and that’s why we’re starting […]
Read the entire article at Time. National and global transportation systems, and the economic activity they support, have been optimized for the climate in which it all developed: Machines are designed to operate in common temperature ranges, logistical plans depend on historical weather patterns, and coastal land development is based on known flood zones. In […]
Read the entire article at Newsweek. Bacteria that eat methane, a greenhouse gas, have been discovered in an Antarctic lake that has been isolated from the atmosphere for thousands of years. Their presence could significantly reduce the potential risk of warming posed by reservoirs of gas locked up in the ice, scientists say. […]