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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
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  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
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    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
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  • Press Releases
  • Knowing Your Neighbor Cares About the Environment Encourages People to Use Less Energy

    Giving people information about how much gas or electricity their neighbours use encourages them to use less energy, research shows.

  • Technology Helps Electric Providers Detect Faults, Prevent Wildfires

    A team of Texas A&M researchers has developed a new technology that helps providers find the cause of outages, and anticipate and predict some failures before outages occur.

  • China’s Energy Policies Require Integrated, Strategic Approach to Balance Air Quality, Carbon Emissions and Water Scarcity Goals

    Committed to addressing the country’s severe air pollution, China is attempting a shift from coal to natural gas and is considering a variety of sources, including domestic and imported gas options as well as creating its own synthetic gas from coal.  

  • Optimal magnetic fields for suppressing instabilities in tokamaks

    Fusion, the power that drives the sun and stars, produces massive amounts of energy. Scientists here on Earth seek to replicate this process, which merges light elements in the form of hot, charged plasma composed of free electrons and atomic nuclei, to create a virtually inexhaustible supply of power to generate electricity in what may be called a “star in a jar.”

  • Barriers and opportunities in renewable biofuels production

    Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have identified two main challenges for renewable biofuel production from cheap sources. Firstly, lowering the cost of developing microbial cell factories, and secondly, establishing more efficient methods for hydrolysis of biomass to sugars for fermentation. Their study was recently published in the journal Nature Energy.

  • Low-Severity Wildfires Impact Soils More Than Previously Believed

    Low-severity wildland fires and prescribed burns have long been presumed by scientists and resource managers to be harmless to soils, but this may not be the case, new research shows.

  • Golden Sandwich Could Make the World More Sustainable

    Scientists have developed a photoelectrode that can harvest 85 percent of visible light in a 30 nanometers-thin semiconductor layer between gold layers, converting light energy 11 times more efficiently than previous methods. 

  • Cracking the code to soot formation

    The longstanding mystery of soot formation, which combustion scientists have been trying to explain for decades, appears to be finally solved, thanks to research led by Sandia National Laboratories.

  • Adding Power Choices Reduces Cost and Risk of Carbon-Free Electricity

    To curb greenhouse gas emissions, nations, states, and cities should aim for a mix of fuel-saving, flexible, and highly reliable sources.

  • Large-Scale Wind and Solar Farms in the Sahara Would Increase Heat, Rain, Vegetation

    Wind and solar farms are known to have local effects on heat, humidity and other factors that may be beneficial – or detrimental – to the regions in which they are situated.

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