Find out more about our Reverse Course series here. With the flip of a switch at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory’s seaside facility in Sequim, Washington, a tangle of pipes and filters ...
Excess carbon dioxide emitted by human activities—such as fossil fuel burning, land-use changes, and deforestation—is known as anthropogenic carbon dioxide. Approximately thirty percent of this ...
Keith Larson, head of the Abisko Scientific Research Station, walks past a pond formed by melting permafrost under the ground at the Storflaket mire in August 2021, in Norrbotten County, Sweden.
Stripping seawater of carbon dioxide via electrochemical processes — thereby prompting oceans to draw down more greenhouse gas from the atmosphere — is a geoengineering approach under consideration ...
Earlier this month, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced more than $24 million in grant funding for projects looking at ways to remove carbon, or reduce its effects, in ...
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Singapore is planning to expand a pilot project that boosts the ocean's capacity to absorb carbon dioxide emissions, using one of several emerging technologies that supporters ...
Water covers 70 percent of our planet, but you probably already knew that. What fewer people are aware of is that our oceans absorb around one quarter of human-made carbon dioxide emissions. To put it ...
The global ocean “conveyor belt” circulation, shown in part here as red and blue lines, circulates cooler seawater below the surface and warmer seawater at the surface throughout the world’s oceans.
As Earth warms, the Arctic Ocean’s ability to absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is waning due to melting permafrost and worsening coastal erosion, according to new research. A study published ...
As Earth warms, the Arctic Ocean’s ability to absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is waning due to melting permafrost and worsening coastal erosion, according to new research. A study published ...
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