Thursday, 4 August 2016

Energy and Environment: From now on, every government agency will have to consider climate change

From now on, every government agency will have to consider climate change; They have a body and a killer. But the case of the dead brown bat makes no sense to scientists.; Researchers may have finally found an antidote to biased thinking about science; ‘I cried…right into my mask': Scientists say Guam’s reefs have bleached four years straight; These two huge states are both going green. But only one is sticking with nuclear; Tesla and SolarCity agree to $ 2.6 billion merger; Storing carbon underground may be safer than we thought;
 
Energy and Environment
With Chris Mooney
 
 
From now on, every government agency will have to consider climate change
The White House has directed all federal agencies to take climate change into account in their actions.
They have a body and a killer. But the case of the dead brown bat makes no sense to scientists.
A fungus that has killed millions of bats in the East and Midwest now is confirmed in Washington state.
 
Researchers may have finally found an antidote to biased thinking about science
Democrats and Republicans who showed more scientific curiosity were less polarized about the science of climate change, a study has found.
 
‘I cried…right into my mask': Scientists say Guam’s reefs have bleached four years straight
Reefs around the world have been bleached of late, but Guam has gotten relatively little notice.
 
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These two huge states are both going green. But only one is sticking with nuclear
New York just took a very different path from California on the relationship between nuclear and renewables.
 
Tesla and SolarCity agree to $ 2.6 billion merger
They plan to merge into a combined rooftop solar, battery storage and electric car company.
 
Storing carbon underground may be safer than we thought
New research suggests that carbon dioxide stayed trapped within a Utah underground reservoir for 100,000 years.
 
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