Against all political intuition, Republican candidates could win votes by taking "green" positions on the controversy over climate change, according to new poll results released Tuesday. Voters
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Feed SubscriptionNew Poll Finds Most Americans See No Immediate Threat from Climate Change
Nearly 40 percent of Americans are part of categories called the "alarmed" or "concerned," meaning they are more likely to say global warming is man-made and are motivated to do something about it. At the opposite end of the ideological spectrum, there are the "doubtful" and "dismissive," -- the 25 percent of Americans who are more likely to express climate skepticism or doubt that climate change will ever harm them personally. [More]
Read More »Jellyfish keep UK nuclear plant shut
LONDON (Reuters) - An invasion of jellyfish into a cooling water pool at a Scottish nuclear power plant kept its nuclear reactors offline on Wednesday, a phenomenon which may grow more common in future, scientists said. Two reactors at EDF Energy's Torness nuclear power plant on the Scottish east coast remained shut a day after they were manually stopped due to masses of jellyfish obstructing cooling water filters. [More]
Read More »Europe cuts CO2 emissions from cars by 3.7 percent
By Pete Harrison BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The fuel efficiency of European cars advanced last year, with exhaust carbon emissions falling 3.7 percent, provisional European Union data showed on Wednesday. [More]
Read More »Beauty Pageants and the Misunderstanding of Evolution Meet….Again
Last week, self proclaimed "geek," Miss California, Alyssa Campanella made beauty pageant history ...by default . When the interviewer posed a Theory of Evolution question, she was one of only two delegates to use the scientific definition of the word "theory" in her response. The honey-drenched, colloquial, conjecture-based definition that the majority of her competitors clung to was, yes, diplomatic.
Read More »E.coli seen spawning biofuel in five years
By Sarah McBride ASPEN, Colorado (Reuters) - The bacteria behind food poisoning worldwide, the mighty E.coli, could be turned into a commercially available biofuel in five years, a U.S. scientist told technology industry and government leaders on Tuesday
Read More »Global Warming and the Science of Extreme Weather
Editor's note: This article is the second of a three-part series by John Carey. Part 1, posted on June 28, is " Storm Warning: Extreme Weather Is a Product ofClimate Change ".
Read More »Climate Researchers Seek Global Warming Clues in the Arctic’s Svalbard Archipelago [Slide Show]
Polar bears are the draw for most visitors to Spitsbergen, the largest island in Norway's Svalbard archipelago. [More]
Read More »Message to Early-Career Scientists: Work to End Third World Diseases
LINDAU, Germany--There's a magazine ad for an expensive skin care product marketed by Christian Dior that claims to trade on aquaporins, the discovery of which by Peter Agre won him the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2003 (he shared it with Roderick MacKinnon).
Read More »Ooze-Down Economics: Will Opening Global Oil Reserves Stimulate the World Economy?
As Libya's civil war continues to disrupt its contribution to the world's oil supply, the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) has taken action. The IEA, which counts the U.S
Read More »Nebraska nuclear power plant beset by floodwaters
By Michael Avok OMAHA, Neb., June 28 (Reuters) - Missouri River floodwaters [More]
Read More »Nobelist Kroto: What’s The Evidence For What You Accept?
Harold Kroto won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1996 for the discovery of buckminsterfullerene, the soccer ball shaped form of carbon better known as buckyballs. On June 28, he spoke to students [at the Lindau Nobel Laureates meeting] about science as a philosophical construct: "I'm going to talk about what science is because it's a totally misunderstood sort of subject
Read More »Big Donation Drives Effort to End Lab Tests on Dogs
By Marian Turner of Nature magazine Man's best friend bears a heavy burden in the pharmaceutical industry. [More]
Read More »Stem-Cell Scientists Grapple with Clinics Offering Unproved Therapies
By Heidi Ledford of Nature magazine When stem-cell clinics are asked for documentation about the treatments they offer, some are quick to produce letters from lawyers instead. [More]
Read More »U.S. Territory Hospitals Have Higher Death Rates, Less Federal Funding
It's no secret that health care in the U.S.
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