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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
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  • New Climate Change Study: Number of People Suffering Extreme Droughts will Double

    Michigan State University is leading a global research effort to offer the first worldwide view of how climate change could affect water availability and drought severity in the decades to come.

    By the late 21st century, global land area and population facing extreme droughts could more than double — increasing from 3% during 1976-2005 to 7%-8%, according to Yadu Pokhrel, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering in MSU’s College of Engineering, and lead author of the research published in Nature Climate Change.

    “More and more people will suffer from extreme droughts if a medium-to-high level of global warming continues and water management is maintained at its present state,” Pokhrel said. “Areas of the Southern Hemisphere, where water scarcity is already a problem, will be disproportionately affected. We predict this increase in water scarcity will affect food security and escalate human migration and conflict.”

    Read more: Michigan State University

    Photo Credit: jodylehigh via Pixabay

     

  • Phytoplankton Factory in the Argentine Sea

    In spring and summer, conditions are often just right for populations of the plant-like organisms explode into enormous blooms.

  • The Long Decline of Arctic Sea Ice

    Forty years of satellite data show that 2020 was just the latest in a decades-long decline of Arctic sea ice.

  • Record Number of Billion-Dollar Disasters Struck U.S. In 2020

    Nation saw its 5th-warmest year on record.

  • Neighbors Influence Coastal Landowners’ Decisions to Armor Shorelines Against Erosion, Rising Seas

    Neighbors play an influential role in private oceanfront landowners’ decisions to protect their shorelines from erosion and rising sea levels, which could lead to excessive armoring of the coastline, a new analysis from Oregon State University shows.

  • Native Biodiversity Collapse in the Eastern Mediterranean

    The coastline of Israel is one of the warmest areas in the Mediterranean Sea. 

  • Global Warming Could Stabilize Faster than Originally Thought If Nations Achieve Net Zero

    The world may be barreling towards climate disaster but rapidly eliminating planet-heating emissions means global temperatures could stabilize within just a couple of decades, scientists say.

  • New Analysis Highlights Importance of Groundwater Discharge Into Oceans

    An invisible flow of groundwater seeps into the ocean along coastlines all over the world. 

  • Scientists Develop a Cheaper Method That Might Help Create Fuels From Plants

    Scientists have figured out a cheaper, more efficient way to conduct a chemical reaction at the heart of many biological processes, which may lead to better ways to create biofuels from plants.

  • Reshaping Coastal Louisiana

    While there are efforts to reinforce its beaches and marshes, some of Barataria Bay is slowly slipping away.

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