MIT researchers have found a creative, climate-friendly way to use a common mineral found in litter boxes to reduce harmful greenhouse gases.
The administration won't move forward with the three leases in the Cook Inlet and the Gulf because of "lack of industry interest" and legal difficulties.
The Canairi was inspired by the real-life canaries used by coal miners to detect toxic gases.
Ex-employees of a legal nonprofit that has attracted support from Mark Ruffalo and Patagonia say the organization has a culture hostile to LGBTQ people.
"We have to prepare for there to not be enough water for everyone who lives here."
We need carbon dioxide removal to keep climate change in check. What should that future look like?
Uranium, which can harm human health, was detected in 63% of drinking water samples collected over a decade, with higher levels in Hispanic communities.
They can start by cleaning up methane, one of the most manageable messes in the climate space.
Helium-3 is leaking from Earth, and it's an intriguing clue as to how our planet formed.
New findings don't prove a cause-and-effect link, but they may inform a re-evaluation of artificial sweetener safety.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine and other issues mean there's a shortage of crucial parts needed for EVs.
A diamond anvil squashed water ice into a never-before-seen transitional form that may exist on other planets.
Over 170 million Americans were exposed to high amounts of lead as children, researchers say—enough to affect their cognition in later life.
Huge methane emissions have been sneaking under the radar, new figures from the International Energy Agency reveal.
Based on the dagger's chemistry and a 3,400-year-old tablet, scientists don’t think it’s from Egypt.
Nearly half of 1,210 eagles showed signs of repeated exposure to lead in a new study.
A new study finds that exposure to 2,4-D is expected to grow worse over time, and harmful effects could be worse for children and pregnant people.
The plant houses around 600 tons of ammonium nitrate which risks turning into a bomb when exposed to extreme heat.
Energy has always had a weird gendered component—and now hydrogen is in the mix, apparently.
There are a number of ways to snuff out Turkmenistan's multidecade natural gas hellhole, from a pile of dirt to bombs. Maybe even a nuclear one.