Displaying 1 - 21 of 21
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Article
Sponsored: Companies are working with nature to reach their corporate carbon targets.
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Article
From vertical farms to fish caves, new technologies aim to boost food production and vanquish hunger.
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Article
Scientific developments and innovation has produced more turkey for a larger population using fewer of our natural resources.
by Jayson Lusk
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Article
A new report shows how some companies and academic research labs are applying extrusion, 3D printing and cellular agriculture to produce meat alternatives.
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Article
New approaches, from CO2-sucking materials to regenerative agriculture, were in the spotlight at VERGE 19.
by RP Siegel
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Article
The trillion-dollar market is growing startups, products and technologies, though capital deployment remains an obstacle.
by CJ Clouse
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Article
Two influential reports suggest that without a massive policy response carbon capture and storage, the shift to clean energy will be too slow to avoid dangerous warming.
by CJ Clouse
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Report
Just a few years ago, the idea of a “carbon economy” seemed just that — an idea, not a reality. A lot has changed since then. The scientific consensus, for
by Ritu Sharma
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Article
Pilot project in Switzerland aims to establish a viable market for captured carbon.
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Article
Negative emissions technology is being hailed as the cure-all for our carbon addiction. It isn't.
by Chris Hawes
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Article
The USEIT — or lose it — Act.
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Article
Marine vertebrate carbon is a global warming mitigation strategy. We should use it.
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Article
And more on your other favorite carbontech startups.
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Article
Plus, the refreshing bipartisan support for carbon capture solutions, and how that could reshape the conversation about climate risks.
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Article
VERGE Carbon is slated for October 22-24 in Oakland, California.
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Article
It may not be the best long-term solution, but these technologies are worth a look.
by Ben Anthony
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Article
Bioenergy is a controversial topic — here's why.
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Article
Science tells us that we need to use negative-emissions technologies to fight climate change — and that starts in the industrial sector.
by Lee Beck