3 big ways sustainable design will shape future cities
There’s always been something fantastical about imagining the cities of the future.
The world.edu network focuses on education, science, innovation and the environment.
Here you can submit and vote on the best content from the world’s leading organisations and websites.
There’s always been something fantastical about imagining the cities of the future.
First, it was a full-page ad in The New York Times signed by companies such as Apple, Morgan Stanley and Unilever.
One of the trickiest aspects of climate science is figuring out if a particular heat wave, flood, or drought was made more likely or severe by climate change.
The shape of the world is hanging by a thread – or rather, according to experts, by a 110 mile-long (177km) rift.
Remember the date April 26, 2017: it will go down as an important day in the history of solving climate change.
"Climate change isn’t stopping with the second season," said Jon Meyersohn, co-executive producer of the Emmy-award winning National Geographic series "Years of Living Dangerously," on why he hopes the series extends to a third season.
Great leaders protect their nations and their communities by addressing current threats, scanning the horizon for approaching storms and transforming policies as needed.
The decades-long federal program to clean up Chesapeake Bay is showing signs of success and is supported by politicians of both parties.
The abrupt change in direction of a Yukon river because of a rapidly melting glacier has attracted international attention.
Rain poured onto Washington D.C. on Earth Day 2017, yet tens of thousands of people gathered on the National Mall to rally for science and call for scientific integrity in the nation’s decision-making, particularly on climate policy.