Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is increasing at rates that are incompatible with staying below 1.5 degrees Celsius (34.7 degrees Fahrenheit) of global warming, a Met Office study warns.
The increase of atmospheric carbon dioxide (COâ‚‚) is now incompatible with IPCC pathways which remain below 1.5°C, a Met Office study finds.
Met Office says rises in atmospheric carbon dioxide are off-track for trajectories that keep global warming to 1.5C with no or little overshoot.
There is more than Hattley’s hunch to let people know their food’s quality is dropping because of climate change. Scientists have confirmed that as carbon dioxide levels rise in the atmosphere, staple crops like wheat and rice lose vitamins, proteins and micronutrients like zinc and iron that humans need to survive.
The quest to limit global warming and stabilize Earth's climate hinges on achieving net-zero emissions of greenhouse gases. This goal requires balancing anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions with greenhouse gas removal.
Construction materials such as concrete and plastic have the potential to lock away billions of tons of carbon dioxide, according to a new study by UC Davis.
A new study examines ways that carbon could be used as a key ingredient in building materials—particularly biomass plastics and cement. Obstacles still remain, as some of these technologies are still in the development stage and many of these carbon-based materials have yet to be introduced into building codes and standards.
Engineers create an efficient system to capture carbon dioxide directly from the air, advancing climate solutions.
When humanity succeeds in overcoming the threat of climate change, it will be due in large part to the widespread adoption of autonomous building technology.
Over the last two years, developers have generated roughly 5 million carbon credits from cleaning up orphaned oil and gas wells.
GOP former House member Lee Zeldin, picked to be EPA administrator, pledged strict interpretation of the country's environmental laws.