Environment
-

Smog Levels Drop on a Major Copenhagen Street After Traffic Ban
A large amount of the heavy automobile pollution from Copenhagen's Bispeengbuen thoroughfare goes straight into people's homes, according to a study by researchers at the University of Copenhagen. A sensor developed by one of the researchers can help fill in the blanks of our understanding about local air pollution.
Latest Research Articles
-

WHO Says Climate Change 'Single Biggest Health Threat' Facing Humanity
-

Overused Road Salt in Winter Can Make Saltier Groundwater, Lakes
-

Plastic Pollution Global Treaty Shows Too Slow To Fight Waste Crisis, New Report Shows
-

Europe Air Pollution: Toxic Air Killed Over 500,000, European Environment Agency Says
-

200-Year-Old Aftershocks Might Still Be Hitting North America Today, Study Says
-

World’s First Garbage Collection Competition Held in Japan Joined by 21 Countries
-

Madagascar Heatwave: Impact of Global Heat Among Populations Unrecorded
-

Extreme Weather Events Increases Social Cost of Carbon By Over 20%, Research Warns
-

Vanuatu Region Jolted By 7-Magnitude Earthquake
-

Environmental Policies: Barking Up the Wrong Tree
-

Coal Power Plants Increase Particulate Pollution and Mortality, Study Finds
-

9 Steps to Slow Down Climate Change and Mitigate Its Effects






