Truckloads of Scotland’s rubbish will be sent to England, experts say
1 hour ago ShareSave Kevin Keane BBC Scotland environment correspondent ShareSave BBC Up to 100 truckloads of Scotland’s waste will be moved each day to England once a landfill ban comes in at the end...
View ArticleRural water systems fear cuts to funding to remove ‘forever chemicals’
Rural water systems are struggling to meet the EPA’s new limits on so-called forever chemicals in drinking water. Now, federal funds to help remove them are in jeopardy under the Trump administration....
View ArticleLeader of top FEMA disaster coordination office resigns, as Trump moves to...
Jeremy Greenberg was in charge of coordinating federal help after hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes and other emergencies. He has resigned from leading FEMA’s National Response Coordination Center....
View ArticleWhat 1,200 miles on a paddleboard taught a writer about ‘blue space’
Author Dan Rubinstein paddled from Ottawa to New York City and back to understand how being near water benefits people. His book is called “Water Borne.” The post What 1,200 miles on a paddleboard...
View ArticleSharks and oysters set to thrive in warmer UK waters
19 hours ago ShareSave Georgina Rannard Climate and science correspondent ShareSave Getty Images The UK could see a boom in endangered sharks, rays and native oysters as species move habitats to...
View ArticleIn Georgia, a runoff looms for Democrats after primary results for public...
This coverage is made possible through a partnership between Grist and WABE, Atlanta’s NPR station. The Democratic primary for the seat representing part of metro Atlanta on the Georgia Public Service...
View ArticleThree years left to limit warming to 1.5C, leading scientists warn
22 hours ago ShareSave Mark Poynting Climate reporter, BBC News ShareSave EPA The Earth could be doomed to breach the symbolic 1.5C warming limit in as little as three years at current levels of...
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View ArticleHuge Roman ‘jigsaw’ reveals 2,000-year-old wall paintings
16 hours ago ShareSave Rebecca MorelleAlison Francis Senior science journalist ShareSave Archaeologists have pieced together thousands of fragments of 2,000-year-old wall plaster to reveal remarkable...
View ArticleWhat are the risks of bombing Iran’s nuclear sites?
12 hours ago ShareSave Rebecca Morelle, Alison Francis and Victoria Gill BBC News Science Team ShareSave Getty Images / Maxar Technologies. The IAEA has described the attacks on Iran’s nuclear...
View ArticlePlastic bag bans and fees curb US shoreline litter, study suggests
4 hours ago ShareSave Tim Dodd Climate and science reporter ShareSave EPA Banning or charging for plastic bags is helping stop them ending up on US shorelines, a study of the country’s litter...
View ArticleA majority of people around the world support a carbon tax — even if they’re...
People in affluent countries around the world are willing to tax themselves to address climate change and ease poverty. That idea defies conventional political wisdom, which typically holds that people...
View ArticleKing’s Midwinter message to Antarctic researchers
1 hour ago ShareSave Sean Coughlan Royal correspondent ShareSave BBC King Charles has recorded a warm personal message to researchers in Antarctica celebrating a frozen Midwinter’s Day, with the...
View ArticleHow China made electric vehicles mainstream
13 hours ago ShareSave Annabelle Liang & Nick Marsh Business reporter & Transport correspondent Reporting fromGuangzhou ShareSave AFP “I drive an electric vehicle because I am poor,” says Lu...
View ArticleFirst celestial image unveiled from revolutionary telescope
9 hours ago ShareSave Ione Wells South America correspondent Georgina Rannard Science correspondent ShareSave NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory A powerful new telescope in Chile has released its first...
View ArticleKiller whales make kelp tools to ‘massage’ each other
19 hours ago ShareSave Victoria Gill Science correspondent, BBC News ShareSave Orcas in the North Pacific have been seen “massaging” each other – rubbing pieces of kelp between their bodies. Using...
View ArticleA rusting old luxury ocean liner is set to become divers’ dream as coral reef
Divers are getting excited about the planned sinking of the SS United States. The once glorious luxury ocean liner is slated to become a coral reef. The post A rusting old luxury ocean liner is set to...
View ArticleA rusting old luxury ocean liner is set to become divers’ dream as artificial...
Divers are getting excited about the planned sinking of the SS United States. The once glorious luxury ocean liner is slated to become an artificial reef. The post A rusting old luxury ocean liner is...
View ArticleClimate change could be great for mosquitoes
<img src='https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2025/06/23/6.24.25-ep_wide-cd06a35f57ac864e242f7efacab44c8e80a0df81.jpg' alt='Aedes albopictus, commonly known as the Asian tiger mosquito, is just one of...
View ArticleThis burger was made in a lab from cow cells… Should it really be served in...
6 hours ago ShareSave Pallab Ghosh ShareSave BBC Inside an anonymous building in Oxford, Riley Jackson is frying a steak. The perfectly red fillet cut sizzles in the pan, its juices releasing a meaty...
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