

A community dedicated to chronicling and spreading the word about positive actions, solutions, and policies being enacted to try to slow or prevent catastrophic climate collapse. We explore strategies and solutions for solving global warming, mitigating and preventing its deleterious effects, and protecting the environment, animal life and human life from it.
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A team in Australia discovered a way to remove carbon from the atmosphere efficiently, and it involves replicating whale poop.
Paris to Replace Parking Spaces With Trees | The city’s new climate plan promises to drop speed limits, repurpose traffic lanes, remove 60k parking spots & create urban “oases” to combat extreme heat
cross-posted from: https://feddit.org/post/4897192
cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/15360304
Our hotter planet doesn’t have to be a hopeless planet.
Biden Urged to 'Follow the Facts' as Study Shows LNG Emissions 33% Worse Than Coal
"The science is clearer than ever: LNG exports and natural gas-sourced hydrogen pose grave risks to our planet and will undermine President Biden's own climate goals," said one campaigner.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/20232082
By Brett Wilkins
September 12, 2024
China, with an 18% share of the global population, uses 26% of the world’s primary energy and emits 33% of the world’s energy-related CO2. The energy transition unfolding in the country isn’t merely a national affair as its ramifications echo globally, explains Mahnaz Hadizadeh, a researcher for con...
The science of protests: demonstrations are on the rise, and scientists are revealing which types work best
Scientist Erica Chenoweth, who studies civil resistance at Harvard Kennedy School in Cambridge in the U.S., showed that every movement that mobilized at least 3.5% of a population was successful. This led to what’s known as the 3.5% rule — that protests require this level of participation to ensure change.
But the figure can be misleading, Chenoweth cautions. A much larger number of people are probably supporting a successful revolution even if they aren’t visibly protesting.
A female-led group of forest rangers in Indonesia are defying social norms to lead patrols in the jungle to combat deforestation.
A first-of-its-kind study shows conservation is worth investing in, researchers say.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/14705005
Conservation actions are effective at reducing global biodiversity loss, according to a major study.
International researchers spent 10 years looking at measures, from hatching Chinook salmon to eradication of invasive algae.
The authors said their findings offered a "ray of light" for those working to protect threatened animals and plants.
It will sprawl out across an area of desert five times the size of Paris, costing $20 billion, and generating power for 16 million homes.
New EPA rule says 200 US chemical plants must reduce toxic emissions that are likely to cause cancer
The rule advances President Joe Biden’s commitment to environmental justice.
"We are not made to sit in a rocking chair and knit," said one of the older Swiss women who won.
A community-based approach to restoration using an ingenious device can bring back coral reefs traumatized by dynamite fishing.
cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/8027175
'Reef stars' restored Indonesia's blast-damaged corals in just 4 years
This piece of paper could revolutionize human waste
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Direct Air Capture vs Thermodynamics (Cool Worlds)
Video Description:
Direct Air Capture (DAC) has been getting more and more attention over the last few years. Could we avert climate change by pulling carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere? Could we not just stop, but actually reverse the damage done? Unfortunately, most don't fully appreciate just quite how much CO2 we've emitted and the outrageous scale of the problem facing us. Today, we apply the fundamental principles of thermodynamics to question whether this is even feasible.
Written & presented by Prof. David Kipping. Edited by Jorge Casas. Fact checking by Alexandra Masegian.
Channel Description:
Space, astronomy, exoplanets, astroengineering and the search for extraterrestrial life & intelligence.
The Cool Worlds Lab, based at the Department of Astronomy, Columbia University, is a team of astronomers s
A mythical giant snake is helping raise climate awareness in Malawi
Sensitive campaigners are finding that belief in Napolo, a legendary multi-headed monster, is no barrier to environmental understanding.
MIT: How to pull carbon dioxide out of seawater
MIT researchers may have found the key to a truly efficient and inexpensive mechanism for removing carbon dioxide from seawater. The method could be far more efficient than existing systems for removing the greenhouse gas from the air.
As carbon dioxide continues to build up in the Earth’s atmosphere, research teams around the world have spent years seeking ways to remove the gas efficiently from the air. Meanwhile, the world’s number one “sink” for carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is the ocean, which soaks up some 30 to 40 percent of all of the gas produced by human activities.
Recently, the possibility of removing carbon dioxide directly from ocean water has emerged as another promising possibility for mitigating CO2 emissions, one that could potentially someday even lead to overall net negative emissions. But, like air capture systems, the idea has not yet led to any widespread use, though there are a few companies attempting to enter this area.
Now, a team of researchers at MIT says they may have found the key to a truly efficient and inexpensive removal mechanism. The findings were reported this week in the journal Energy and Environmental Science, in a paper by MIT professors T. Alan Hatton and Kripa Varana
Small Modular Reactors Explained - Nuclear Power's Future?
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🤔 I legitimately do wonder why stuff like this and support for nuclear energy in general hasn't skyrocketed on account of climate change. It's the one large-scale means that we have to achieve clean energy with current technology, yet I see no governments pushing to replace coal plants with nuclear ones. You'd think the companies who own the coal plants would just accept the writing on the wall and switch to nuclear, if only to save themselves.
There's so much about humanity's tepid response to climate change in general that does not make sense to me, but the fact remains that nuclear is an important tool we have in our toolbox and we desperately need to start using it to prevent the real tragedy of runaway climate collapse.
What do you guys think? Do you think these small modular reactors will take off or nah?