
The International Energy Agency keeps predicting a decline in global coal use. But thanks to soaring electricity demand in China and India, coal consumption will hit another new record this year: 8.8 billion tons
Written by spacedaily.com

The International Energy Agency keeps predicting a decline in global coal use. But thanks to soaring electricity demand in China and India, coal consumption will hit another new record this year: 8.8 billion tons
Written by Caroline Delbert

Scientists have recently crafted and taken images of a novel new magnetic substance known as an altermagnetic material
Written by James Edward Kamis

Written by Jocelyn Solis-Moreira

When it comes to the state of the climate, a new study finds that our fear over the planet’s health may be “greatly overestimated”
Written by Sharon Lerner and Al Shaw

Formaldehyde often poses the greatest risk in the one place people feel safest: inside their homes. The EPA has known for more than four decades that formaldehyde is toxic, but the companies that rely on it have thwarted the agency’s attempts to limit the chemical
Written by Marcelo Giesler

For the past five years, I ran the Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement at Dartmouth, an initiative sponsored by the John Templeton Foundation
Written by Dr Robert Malone MD, MS

The House Select Committee on the Coronavirus Pandemic has issued a 550 page report summarizing the findings from their two years of investigation
Written by Chris Morrison

The British Government is one of the main financial backers of a new international campaign designed to suppress online climate science skepticism ahead of next year’s ‘make-or-break’ COP30 in Brazil
Written by Lynne Balzer

After a careful study of 31,464 satellite records compiled over the last twenty years, a team of scientists and mathematicians from Thailand has announced that the temperatures in Greenland have been declining for at least twenty years
Written by Tyler Durden

The ‘clean green’ energy fiasco has reached a new level of incompetence and waste
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

We often have occasion to complain about the tendency of climate scientists to adjust historical surface thermometer data downwards, thus raising the amount of alleged warming since the early 20th century
Written by David Gornoski

In the shadow of America’s opioid crisis lies a less obvious, yet potentially critical factor: the widespread consumption of seed oils
Written by Climate Discussion Nexus

Having face-planted brutally in the 2024 American election with condescending lectures to the rubes about how the experts are always right, the chattering classes are seeking to undo the damage with condescending lectures to the rubes about how the experts are always right
Written by David Carrigg

The chief of the Dashwood Volunteer Fire Department near Qualicum Beach is warning people about lithium batteries after one exploded in his home
Written by Carly Cassella

The most complicated object in the known Universe is bound to inspire some heated debate, but neuroscientists are now arguing over a basic aspect of the brain we thought we’d figured out
Written by John Leake

When COVID-19 arrived in the spring of 2020, I was 49-years-old and about to turn 50. I’d spent the better part of 2019 living on the island of Maui, surfing every day, and I felt as strong and vital as ever