James Dyke is an associate professor of earth system science and assistant director of the Global Systems Institute at the ...
By 2100, it predicted that if no action is taken to lower our fossil fuel use (a scenario called RCP8.5 by the UN’s ...
Microplastics could be disrupting how oceans absorb and store carbon, potentially undermining a natural buffer that helps ...
Trees are known for absorbing CO2. But microbes in their bark also absorb other climate-active gases, methane, hydrogen, and ...
Research shows microplastics are flooding the oceans, lessening their ability to absorb carbon dioxide, a process critical to regulating Earth’s temperature. SHARJAH, EMIRATE OF SHARJAH, UNITED ARAB ...
Permafrost holds thousands of years worth of microorganisms and carbon, and as it thaws in our warming climate, it releases ...
A new paper published in the peer-reviewed American Journal of Economics and Sociology by petrophysicist Andy May and science journalist Marcel Crok, both with the Climate Intelligence Foundation ...
Raymond Culbertson. We all know trees are climate heroes. They pull carbon dioxide out of the air, release the oxygen we ...
Research shows microplastics interfere with ocean carbon cycles, posing risks to climate and ecosystems. Urgent global action ...
A crowd of people take part in a climate strike protest. (Mika Baumeister / Unsplash) For more than half a century, from a remote monitoring station atop Hawaii’s dormant volcano Mauna Kea, the ...
Building materials such as concrete have the potential to store billions of tons of carbon dioxide away from the atmosphere, according to a new study from UC Davis. Image shows UC Davis Aggie Square ...
Researchers around the world are working to find ways to make concrete greener, including at the University of Pennsylvania.