Interesting Ideas

From the WWW of RSS
How ‘smog capital of Poland’ saved 6,000 lives by cutting soot levels
How ‘smog capital of Poland’ saved 6,000 lives by cutting soot levels
How ‘smog capital of Poland’ saved 6,000 lives by cutting soot levels

How ‘smog capital of Poland’ saved 6,000 lives by cutting soot levels

Ajit Niranjan on Environment | The Guardian

Kraków’s ban on burning solid fuels plus subsidies for cleaner heating has led to clearer air and better health

As a child, Marcel Mazur had to hold his breath in parts of Kraków thick with “so much smoke you could see and smell it”. Now, as an allergy specialist at Jagiellonian University Medical College who treats patients struggling to breathe, he knows all too well the damage those toxic gases do inside the human body.

“It’s not that we have this feeling that nothing can be done. But it’s difficult,” Mazur said.

Continue reading...

Read More

Enhanced Geothermal Systems Could Expand Geothermal Power Generation

US Energy Information Administration on CleanTechnica

The first large-scale commercial enhanced geothermal system (EGS) power generator in the United States is under construction with the company reporting in our generator survey that it plans to bring the project online in June 2026. Below, we examine what enhanced geothermal systems are and how they differ from conventional geothermal systems. What is ... [continued]

The post Enhanced Geothermal Systems Could Expand Geothermal Power Generation appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More
Weather tracker: heavy snow brings transport chaos to Romania
Weather tracker: heavy snow brings transport chaos to Romania
Weather tracker: heavy snow brings transport chaos to Romania

Weather tracker: heavy snow brings transport chaos to Romania

Nicholas Lee and Oliver Lewis for MetDesk on Environment | The Guardian

Winter storm dumps more than 40cm of snow on the capital, while in France, Storm Pedro follows hot of heels of Storm Nils

While the days are growing longer and meteorological spring is just a couple of weeks away, Romania remains firmly in the grip of winter.

A powerful storm brought blizzards and heavy snowfall across much of the south-east of the country, with the capital, Bucharest, receiving 40cm of snow – far exceeding the February average of 11cm.

Continue reading...

Read More

$100 Million In Funding Announced For New Public EV Chargers In Pennsylvania

Jake Richardson on CleanTechnica

When I wrote about 12 new EV charging ports installed in central Pennsylvania some months back, it wasn’t clear how much or when the federal EV funding could be released to support the addition of more public chargers. Greater EV charging expansion means less “range anxiety” for EV drivers because ... [continued]

The post $100 Million In Funding Announced For New Public EV Chargers In Pennsylvania appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More

Trump GOP: Forget Progress, Back to the Caves!

Zachary Shahan on CleanTechnica

As I started reading Steve Hanley’s article last night about the Trump administration putting pressure on the International Energy Agency (IEA) to focus only on fossil fuels and stop tracking and reporting on renewable energy, my blood started to boil and I was driven to write this article. The level ... [continued]

The post Trump GOP: Forget Progress, Back to the Caves! appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More

Sierra Club Report: PFAS Found in Nearly All Alabama’s Waterways

Press Release on CleanTechnica

MONTGOMERY, AL — A new report released today has found PFAS in nearly all of Alabama’s waterways, confirming the statewide threat of these deadly toxins. PFAS are man-made “forever chemicals” that don’t break down in the environment and are highly toxic to people. They are virtually unregulated by the US ... [continued]

The post Sierra Club Report: PFAS Found in Nearly All Alabama’s Waterways appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More
New drone unit to investigate illegal waste dumping across England
New drone unit to investigate illegal waste dumping across England
New drone unit to investigate illegal waste dumping across England

New drone unit to investigate illegal waste dumping across England

Sandra Laville on Environment | The Guardian

Government announces tougher measures to tackle unlicensed sites as ‘prolific waste criminal’ is ordered to pay £1.4m

A new 33-strong drone unit is being deployed to investigate the scourge of illegal waste dumping across England, the government has announced.

The improvements to the investigation of illegal waste dumping – which costs the UK economy £1bn a year – come as the ringleader of a major waste crime gang was ordered to pay £1.4m after being convicted at Birmingham crown court.

Continue reading...

Read More
Wood burning pollution leads to 8,600 premature US deaths a year, study finds
Wood burning pollution leads to 8,600 premature US deaths a year, study finds
Wood burning pollution leads to 8,600 premature US deaths a year, study finds

Wood burning pollution leads to 8,600 premature US deaths a year, study finds

Gary Fuller on Environment | The Guardian

Wood is primary heating in 2% of homes but contributes to producing 21% of country’s wintertime particle pollution

Air pollution from home wood burning is estimated to lead to 8,600 premature deaths in the US each year, according to research.

Just 2% of US homes use wood for primary heating. Another 8% burn wood for pleasure, aesthetics or supplementary heating, but combined they produce 21% of the country’s wintertime particle pollution.

Continue reading...

Read More
The heat suffocates, the fires rage – even by Australian standards, this summer is brutal
The heat suffocates, the fires rage – even by Australian standards, this summer is brutal
The heat suffocates, the fires rage – even by Australian standards, this summer is brutal

The heat suffocates, the fires rage – even by Australian standards, this summer is brutal

Donna Lu on Environment | The Guardian

In this week’s newsletter: The south-east of the country is suffering through the worst heatwave since 2019’s ‘black summer’, while the government continues to back fossil fuel projects

Don’t get Down to Earth delivered to your inbox? Sign up here

Australians are no strangers to blistering weather – being a “sunburnt country” of “droughts and flooding rains” is baked into our national identity. But since the 2019-20 bushfires, which burned through an area almost the size of the UK, and killed or displaced 3 billion animals, the arrival of warmer weather each year is accompanied by dread. This summer has brought punishing extremes of heat and fire that are brutal even by Australian standards.

More, after this week’s most important reads.

‘A different set of rules’: thermal drone footage shows Musk’s AI power plant flouting clean air regulations

The death of Heather Preen: how an eight-year-old lost her life amid sewage crisis

Trump lashes out at California governor’s green energy deal with UK

‘Landmark’ greenwashing case against Australian gas giant Santos dismissed by federal court

‘What’s more important, the electricity or food?’: extreme heat is driving up power bills in central Australia

What the Albanese government did on the environment amid the Liberals’ turmoil: threatened species, a new coal project and carbon leakage

Continue reading...

Read More
Week in wildlife: a peek-a-boo fish, dunkin’ frogs and a white crow
Week in wildlife: a peek-a-boo fish, dunkin’ frogs and a white crow
Week in wildlife: a peek-a-boo fish, dunkin’ frogs and a white crow

Week in wildlife: a peek-a-boo fish, dunkin’ frogs and a white crow

Elena Goodinson on Environment | The Guardian

This week’s best wildlife photographs from around the world

Continue reading...

Read More
‘We’re not hippies’: why these Iowa farmers swapped pigs for mushrooms
‘We’re not hippies’: why these Iowa farmers swapped pigs for mushrooms
‘We’re not hippies’: why these Iowa farmers swapped pigs for mushrooms

‘We’re not hippies’: why these Iowa farmers swapped pigs for mushrooms

Tom Duggins on Environment | The Guardian

Faaborgs rail against oppressive industrial agricultural system with unexpected evolution into indie artisan food firm

As a sixth-generation Iowa farmer, Tanner Faaborg is all too aware that agricultural traditions are hard to shake. So when he set in motion plans to change his family’s farm from a livestock operation housing more than 8,000 pigs each year to one that grows lion’s mane and oyster mushrooms, he knew some of his peers might laugh at him. He just did not necessarily expect his brother to be chief among them.

“My older brother has worked with pigs his entire adult life, managing about 70,000 of them across five counties,” Faaborg says. “But we got to a point where he went from laughing at me to saying: well, I guess maybe I’ll quit my job and help you out.”

Continue reading...

Read More

Battery Storage System Replaces Wastewater Facility Diesel Generator

Jake Richardson on CleanTechnica

Viridi recently announced one of its battery energy storage systems has replaced a diesel backup generator at a wastewater facility in New York State. When we write about battery storage on this site, sometimes it is paired with solar power to store excess clean electricity. Energy storage has other applications, ... [continued]

The post Battery Storage System Replaces Wastewater Facility Diesel Generator appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More
Country diary: Was this the fox version of a ‘come-hither’ smile? | Clare Stares
Country diary: Was this the fox version of a ‘come-hither’ smile? | Clare Stares
Country diary: Was this the fox version of a ‘come-hither’ smile? | Clare Stares

Country diary: Was this the fox version of a ‘come-hither’ smile? | Clare Stares

Claire Stares on Environment | The Guardian

Langstone, Hampshire: It’s the time of year when dog foxes shadow receptive females – who only have the briefest of windows to mate

Walking the coastal path, I stopped to scan the flooded horse paddock for the kingfisher reported there in recent days. Three grey herons loitered along the fence line, hunchbacked and watchful. Where shallow pools had formed, teals dabbled and drifted in loose rafts, while a dozen little egrets fed on the margins, using their yellow feet to stir up the mud and flush out small invertebrates before snapping them up with their rapier-like bills.

The hoped-for flash of iridescent blue failed to materialise, but a russet streak caught my eye on the far edge of the field – a female fox, lean and alert. As I watched, I realised she was being followed by another – a thickset, wolfish dog fox with a grizzled coat. The vixen slowed, turned, dropped her forelegs to the ground and raised her rump, holding the pose briefly before springing away.

Continue reading...

Read More
The true cost of Ecuador’s perfect roses: how the global flower trade poisons workers
The true cost of Ecuador’s perfect roses: how the global flower trade poisons workers
The true cost of Ecuador’s perfect roses: how the global flower trade poisons workers

The true cost of Ecuador’s perfect roses: how the global flower trade poisons workers

Lise Josefsen Hermann and Jasper Fabian Wenzel in La Chimba, Ecuador on Environment | The Guardian

Many farmers in the Andes rely on growing blooms for export, but high water usage and risky pesticides threaten Indigenous communities

The fertile high valley near La Chimba trembles with sounds. The rhythms of brass bands and cumbia music clash like weather fronts, each playing its own beats in the Andean rain. A rainbow spans the slopes and white plastic greenhouses, protecting the region’s treasure: roses bred for beauty, shipped abroad, blooming far from home.

Amid the drizzle, Patricia Catucuamba and her husband, Milton Navas, share a jug of chicha, a maize brew vital to their harvest celebrations. Since 2000, they have worked as dairy farmers, but sustaining a milk business requires expanses of land beyond the reach of most smallholders.

Continue reading...

Read More

Tesla Receives FCC Waiver for Cybercab Wireless Charging System

Zachary Shahan on CleanTechnica

Whatever you think of it, the Cybercab is Tesla’s next vehicle. The first production car has now been produced, and the model will apparently go on sale to customers this year — presumably fairly soon. Considering that the model doesn’t have a steering wheel or pedals, it would be weird ... [continued]

The post Tesla Receives FCC Waiver for Cybercab Wireless Charging System appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More

The War Against Solar Power Is Doomed To Fail, Part Infinity

Tina Casey on CleanTechnica

More solar power plants for the USA: the solar manufacturer Talon PV has taken another step towards the construction of a 4.8-gigawatt TOPCon solar manufacturing facility, to be located in Texas.

The post The War Against Solar Power Is Doomed To Fail, Part Infinity appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More

New York Pulls Back on Robotaxi Legislation

Zachary Shahan on CleanTechnica

New York was looking to open up robotaxi expansion in the state, beyond New York City itself. New York Governor Kathy Hochul had put a proposal on the table to basically legalize robotaxis in the state beyond the Big Apple. However, that proposal has now been pulled. “Based on conversations ... [continued]

The post New York Pulls Back on Robotaxi Legislation appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More

A US Sodium-Ion Battery Maker Challenges Powerwall For Home Energy Storage, And More

Tina Casey on CleanTechnica

The US firm Syntropic has launched three new sodium-ion battery products into the energy storage marketplace, for residential, commercial, industrial, and utility-scale use.

The post A US Sodium-Ion Battery Maker Challenges Powerwall For Home Energy Storage, And More appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More

Tesla Cybercab Skepticism, Ford & GM EV Disappointment — YouTube

Zachary Shahan on CleanTechnica

Steve Hanley, Larry Evans, and I sat down yesterday to talk about some of the hottest stories of the past week. We discussed the Tesla Cybercab (and some of our skepticism about it being the big hit Tesla wants it to be); the slow start to EV sales in China ... [continued]

The post Tesla Cybercab Skepticism, Ford & GM EV Disappointment — YouTube appeared first on CleanTechnica.

Read More
Deer shooting to be facilitated in England to protect woodlands
Deer shooting to be facilitated in England to protect woodlands
Deer shooting to be facilitated in England to protect woodlands

Deer shooting to be facilitated in England to protect woodlands

Helena Horton Environment reporter on Environment | The Guardian

Government plans legislation giving landowners and tenants rights to cull deer to protect crops and property

It will be much easier to shoot deer in England under government plans that aim to curb the damage the animals are doing to the country’s woodlands.

Emma Reynolds, the environment secretary, plans to bring forward new legislation to give landowners and tenants legal rights to shoot deer to protect crops and property.

Continue reading...

Read More