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Wetlands loss has increased residential flood insurance claim payments by $10 billion across the US, study finds
Wetlands loss has increased residential flood insurance claim payments by $10 billion across the US, study finds Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor A new study published in Nature Water finds that wetland loss across the United States has increased residential flood insurance claim payments by more than $10 billion since 1985, underscoring the critical role wetlands play in reducing riverine flood damage. Authored by Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) experts, Jesse...
Innovative local collaboration can unlock stronger environmental protection in England, study shows
The use of digital tools and better coordination between different organizations can help the U.K. significantly optimize its first line of defense against ecological degradation, new research shows. Unified and local efforts can support a thriving environment and improve community well-being, University of Exeter experts have found. They hope their blueprint—which proposes tech-driven, community-led action—can rescue local environmental enforcement from funding cuts and jurisdictional...
Trump pumps federal funds into coal plants in the name of energy security
The Trump Administration is using Cold War-era rules to authorize up to $500 million in funding to keep 13 coal-fired power plants going and build a coal export terminal in California. America's Department of Energy (DoE) says it is securing the funding via the Defense Production Act (DPA), which grants the president authority to use federal financial incentives to stimulate private domestic industry deemed critical to national defense. At the same time, the DoE announced that one of the...
Managing hydrogen emissions is key to maximizing climate benefits as hydrogen use expands, say researchers
Managing hydrogen emissions is key to maximizing climate benefits as hydrogen use expands, say researchers Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Current estimates of hydrogen's climate impact are now sufficiently robust to inform policy and business decision-making, according to researchers in a new review article on the climate impacts of hydrogen emissions. Hydrogen is expected to be an important component of future low-carbon energy and industrial systems, particularly...
The dark side of the 2026 World Cup: more flights, more emissions, more climate crisis
A report warns that the tournament in the United States, Canada and Mexico could produce twice the emissions of previous editions, due to more teams, matches and flights. The 2026 World Cup, to be held in the United States, Canada and Mexico, could become the most polluting tournament in football history. That is the warning from the FIFA's Climate Blind Spot (source in Spanish) report, which says that the expanded format, the geographical spread and reliance on air travel will sharply...
Europe pours money into ocean research as Trump guts science funding
PARIS — The European Union wants to plug a gaping hole in ocean research left behind by the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump. The trouble is, it has a lot less cash to splash. Last week, the European Commission launched the “OceanEye” program, which aims to make the EU “a global leader in ocean intelligence” by investing in critical ocean observation technologies and data collection on how oceans evolve. It came two weeks after the...
Czech MEP’s undeclared think-tank role raises conflict-of-interest questions
BRUSSELS — Alexandr Vondra, a Czech member of the European Parliament, did not disclose his role as honorary chair of an influential think tank in the Czech Republic, despite negotiating files affecting the companies funding the organization. Transparency International argues that Vondra’s failure to disclose his relationship with the Prague Center of Transatlantic Relations may violate the European Parliament’s code of...
Housing First is a disaster. I saw Sacramento's homeless chaos firsthand
America’s homelessness crisis is routinely framed as a housing crisis. It is a crisis born from the collapse of accountability at every level of the system. Nowhere are the consequences of that collapse more visible than in California — and especially in its capital city, Sacramento.
SEN KEVIN CRAMER: China builds for war while America waits on permits
For too long, the debate over permitting reform has been confined to the wonky world of Washington insiders — endless discussions about transmission lines, pipelines, lawsuits, and administrative procedures. Policymakers fixate on the bark while missing the trees, let alone the forest. The stakes are far higher than connecting a natural gas plant, wind farm or data center to the grid.
How do you stop Ebola at the World Cup?
LOS ANGELES — When the United States, Canada and Mexico formally submitted their co-hosting bid to soccer governing body FIFA in 2018, they touted the safety of the region, noting “no major endemic infectious diseases across any of our Host Countries.” Now, as the three countries prepare to welcome one of the largest international gatherings around the globe since the Covid-19 pandemic, infectious diseases are front of mind. Of particular concern is an outbreak of Ebola that is...