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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
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • Study Finds Significant Chemical Exposures in Women With Cancer

    Clear link between PFAS, BPA exposures and a prior cancer diagnosis found in large national study.

  • 'Getting a Handle' on a Potent Climate Threat

    Spending days camping in a mosquito-filled swamp on the Indonesian island of Borneo, Alison Hoyt's goal was to measure methane emissions in tropical wetlands – one of the largest sources of the potent greenhouse gas.

  • Roadside Hedges Can Reduce Harmful Ultrafine Particle Pollution Around Schools

    A new study led by Cambridge University confirms that planting hedges between roadsides and school playgrounds can dramatically reduce children’s exposure to traffic-related particle pollution.

  • 100-Year Floods Could Occur Yearly by End of 21st Century

    Some floods are so severe they rarely strike more than once a century, but rising seas could threaten coastal communities with yearly extreme floods.

  • To Cut Global Emissions, Replace Meat and Milk with Plant-Based Alternatives

    Replacing 50% of meat and milk products with plant-based alternatives by 2050 can reduce agriculture and land use related greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 31% and halt the degradation of forest and natural land, according to new research.

  • Climate Change Hurting Water Quality in Rivers Worldwide, Study Finds

    Bouts of intense drought and rainfall are hurting water quality in rivers around the globe, according to a sprawling new analysis.

  • Atmospheric Scientists Reveal Much of Houston’s Ozone Exceedance Due to Air Flows From the North

    University of Houston atmospheric science researchers have found that while local emissions play a role in the rise of ozone levels in Houston, most of the pollutants can be carried in from other regions across the country, leading to excess ozone pollution.

  • University of Houston Researchers Charting a Sustainable Course in Oceanic Carbon Capture

    As researchers around the world race against time to develop new strategies and technologies to fight climate change, a team of scientists at the University of Houston is exploring one possible way to directly reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the environment: Negative emissions technologies (NETs).

  • World Can Now Breathe Easier

    Ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is the world’s leading environmental health risk factor.

  • Bees Struggle to Find Flowers Because of Air Pollution

    A research team comprising the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH) and the Universities of Birmingham, Reading, Surrey and Southern Queensland, found that ozone substantially changes the size and scent of floral odour plumes given off by flowers, and that it reduced honeybees' ability to recognise odours by up to 90% from just a few metres away.

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