Growth in US green economy dwarfs that of fossil fuel industry
While U.S. President Donald Trump may be "the world’s most powerful climate change denier,"our latest research suggests that he took over over a thriving green economy.
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.
While U.S. President Donald Trump may be "the world’s most powerful climate change denier,"our latest research suggests that he took over over a thriving green economy.
Imagine walking down main street America and, instead of cookie-cutter chains, box stores and endless cars, you find a place full of exciting activity — pedestrians, regional food, local character and culture.
As we hurtle towards the ever-more-out-of-reach milestones of the next United Nations climate change conference, in Chile, more companies are making more aggressive climate impact commitments. That’s good news.
One of my television heroes, former late-night host David Letterman — among the best interviewers in the business, especially these days, in his longer format — used to feature an occasional bit titled “Is This Anything?”
Much of the world today — where we live, what we eat, what we do — is built on the basic assumption of a stable climate.
Protecting land from development provides numerous ecological and social benefits, but many people debate whether it hurts or helps local economies.
It's working! The "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" cleanup is finally underway.
As a child of rubber tappers in the Brazilian Amazon, Chico Mendes saw how quickly the life-sustaining forest could disappear if soy farmers and cattle ranchers wanted the land for themselves.
A New Mexico Tech professor has found that both legal and illegal activity at the U.S.-Mexico border are causing a decrease in vegetation cover.
Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos has promised to make the company carbon neutral and meet the goals of the Paris climate agreement by 2040.