by faster | Jul 22, 2019 | Blog
SOURCE: CarbonBrief DATE: July 22, 2019 SNIP: Machines that suck CO2 directly from the air could cut the cost of meeting global climate goals, a new study finds, but they would need as much as a quarter of global energy supplies in 2100. The research, published today...
by faster | Jun 11, 2019 | Blog
SOURCE: The Guardian DATE: June 11, 2019 SNIP: Carbon emissions from the global energy industry last year rose at the fastest rate in almost a decade after extreme weather and surprise swings in global temperatures stoked extra demand for fossil fuels. BP’s annual...
by faster | May 20, 2019 | Blog
SOURCE: New York Times DATE: May 20, 2019 SNIP: Native earthworms disappeared from most of northern North America 10,000 years ago, during the ice age. Now invasive earthworm species from southern Europe — survivors of that frozen epoch, and introduced to this...
by faster | May 7, 2019 | Blog
SOURCE: Grist DATE: May 7, 2019 SNIP: Just the news you’ve been waiting for: The amount of carbon dioxide in our planet’s atmosphere has reached a new high. April’s average was 413.52 parts per million, a new record, according to a spokesperson at Scripps Institution...
by faster | Apr 23, 2019 | Blog
SOURCE: CBC DATE: April 23, 2019 SNIP: A number of major oilsands operations in northern Alberta seem to be emitting significantly more carbon pollution than companies have been reporting, newly published research from federal scientists suggests, which could have...