Subtle temperature differences at the ocean surface allow more carbon dioxide (CO2) to be absorbed, new research shows.
If you wanted to scrub carbon dioxide pollution from the air around us, having a magic sponge would help. While not exactly magical, a team at UC Berkeley has discovered the next best thing.
Trees have long done the heavy lifting of sequestering carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, but no matter how big the planting spree, nature won’t catch up to human impact on our warming planet. But UC ...
The Vietnamese government is offering various incentives to green projects in a bid to speed up its establishment of a carbon ...
Janet Mills, spent four hours Wednesday trying to reach a consensus on how best to lessen and prepare for the impacts of ... In 1990, Maine produced 31.4 million metric tons of carbon dioxide ...
Capturing and storing carbon underground is a big part of California’s efforts to tackle climate change but community members ...
The nascent industry for removing carbon dioxide directly from the air is calling on the U.S. government to adopt standards ...
Capturing and storing the carbon dioxide humans produce is key to lowering atmospheric greenhouse gases and slowing global warming, but today's carbon capture technologies work well only for ...
Plants the world over are absorbing about 31% more carbon dioxide than previously thought, according to a new assessment. The research is expected to improve Earth system simulations that scientists ...
A new discovery by scientists at the University of Basel in Switzerland has revealed how tiny ocean algae, known as diatoms, ...