EV batteries old & new, could be a solution to grid storage.
By Sarah Deweerdt
New research shows how more trees could cut ER visits in heatwaves
By Warren Cornwall
Would capping the number of years a car can be on the road reduce emissions? Not so much.
By Sarah Deweerdt
Can climate change break the partisan logjam?
By Mark Harris
Can AI make crop production more sustainable?
By Emma Bryce
Dwindling biodiversity might make you sick.
By Warren Cornwall
What's the carbon footprint of average Internet use?
By Sarah Deweerdt
Sperm whales are saying far more than we thought. But, what exactly are they talking about?
By Warren Cornwall
First continental scale study weighs floating solar panels against new dam construction
By Sarah Deweerdt
Global study finds conservation makes a measurable difference
By Warren Cornwall
Carbon markets could finance green wastewater infrastructure for a huge win-win-win
By Sarah Deweerdt
What does family planning look like in a warming world?
By Mark Harris
The dilemma of killing one native species to save another
By Warren Cornwall
Companies that ignore climate change risks lose market value
By Sarah Deweerdt
Fences and roads take a genetic toll on wildlife
By Warren Cornwall
Global warming is coming for your shopping cart
By Sarah Deweerdt
Designing a More Climate-Friendly Cow | Anthropocene Mag
By Katharine Gammon
Is hydropower aging out of the clean energy race?
By Mark Harris
Does that FSC label actually buy better wildlife protection?
By Warren Cornwall
Connecting people in the present with people in the future
By Sarah Deweerdt
Do Carbon Prizes Work? | from Anthropocene Magazine
By Mark Harris
From rubble to reef in just four years: How a metal sculpture revived Indonesian coral
By Warren Cornwall
When it comes to climate action, beware the policy bundle
By Sarah Deweerdt
Huge wildlife study probes the nuances of the 'anthropause' created by the COVID pandemic
By Warren Cornwall
Waterhouse Down | An Anthropocene Climate Parable
By James Sturz
Social inequities can skew our view of the natural world
By Warren Cornwall
To reach climate skeptics, tap into self-interested values
By Sarah Deweerdt
In an unusual twist, guard dogs could benefit wild predators
By Warren Cornwall
Climate journalism is strong in climate vulnerable countries
By Sarah Deweerdt
The environmental and health benefits of forgoing red meat are strong. For dairy? Not so much.
By Emma Bryce
Flower farms could clean up polluted waterways, scientists show
By Warren Cornwall
Researchers coax people to envision greener cities using AI images of familiar streets
By Sarah Deweerdt
Will renewables break the power grid or save it?
By Mark Harris
Which countries are positioned forsustainable development?
By Sarah Deweerdt
Engineering plants with deeper roots could be a huge climate boon. Scientists just made a big find.
By Emma Bryce
You're probably underestimating the willingness of your fellow citizens to act on climate
By Sarah Deweerdt
A surprising culprit for plummeting nighttime pollination
By Warren Cornwall
David Beckham and The Upcycled Garbage Truck
By Julie Halpert
The first megastudy of climate messages hints at what motivates different audiences
By Sarah Deweerdt
How does less herbicide = fewer weeds + higher yields? Unique soil microbe might be an answer.
By Emma Bryce
A remarkable coastal restoration by returning sea otters
By Warren Cornwall
How to turn money managers bullish on green investing.
By Sarah Deweerdt
What's the best way to kill a tree? Scientists have an answer.
By Warren Cornwall
Does simply discussing geoengineering derail climate action?
By Sarah Deweerdt
Firing Brimstone | Climate Parables by Anthropocene Magazine
By Neal Stephenson
Should the world follow China's climate lead?
By Mark Harris
Solar farms could come with a pollinator bonus
By Warren Cornwall
This counterintuitive technology fights climate change by making more carbon dioxide
By Peter Fairley
A crackdown on shark finning could paradoxically hurt sharks
By Warren Cornwall
Electricity trading is the secret to a renewable grid
By Sarah Deweerdt
Thousands of ships cross the ocean invisibly. Until now.
By Warren Cornwall
AI is making an adventurous and sustainable plant diet possible
By Veronique Greenwood