Reluctance to rely on China for green technology could slow climate action

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Carbon Neutral Regulation in AI Training

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Photovoltaic circuit board production in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province, in 2021. New research suggests that concerns about relying too heavily on Chinese manufacturing are shaping climate policy – and could even delay the adoption of green technologies around the world. The study by Dr James Jackson from The University of Manchester, working alongside Dr Mathias Larsen […]

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The Climate Change Committee (CCC) has released a new report to complement its 2025 advice on the UK’s Seventh Carbon Budget. The independent, statutory body tested its cost and energy security conclusions against different scenarios. It found that the total additional cost of a single fossil fuel price spike of 2022 magnitude is likely to […]
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Photo courtesy of Freepik As urbanization continues to expand, the need for balancing development with conservation becomes increasingly vital. Construction projects often disrupt natural habitats, leading to loss of biodiversity and ecological damage. To mitigate these effects, it’s essential to adopt construction practices that prioritize environmental sustainability. This article aims to explore best practices that […]

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Curiosity-driven research has long sparked technological transformations. A century ago, curiosity about atoms led to quantum mechanics, and eventually the transistor at the heart of modern computing. Conversely, the steam engine was a practical breakthrough, but it took fundamental research in thermodynamics to fully harness its power. Today, artificial intelligence and science find themselves at […]

We handpick and explain the most important stories at the intersection of climate, land, food and nature over the past fortnight. This is an online version of Carbon Brief’s fortnightly Cropped email newsletter. Subscribe for free here. Key developments Fertiliser disruption in Middle East FOOD RISKS: The US-Israel war on Iran is “disrupting” the production and […]

The Iran war has spurred a range of commentators to renew calls for the UK government to issue new licences for oil and gas drilling in the North Sea. They argue that new domestic drilling could boost energy security at a time of volatility in major oil-and-gas producing countries in the Middle East. However, such […]

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Young adults growing up in the attention economy — preparing for adult life, with social media and chatbots competing for their attention — can easily fall into unhealthy relationships with digital platforms. But what if chatbots weren’t mere distractions from real life? Could they be designed humanely, as moral partners whose digital goal is to […]
The Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School, the GDR ClimaLex, CNRS, and the Institute of Legal and Philosophical Sciences (ISJPS) at Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne are pleased to invite submissions for the workshop Corporate Climate Accountability Litigation: Law, Strategy and Accountability, to be held at the Columbia Global Center in Paris […]

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RMIT’s Electronic Dolphin minibot is a proof‑of‑concept device designed to skim oil from the surface of water. It has a front‑mounted nozzle and compact dolphin‑like body (image credit: Peter Clarke, RMIT University) Engineers at RMIT University in Australia have developed a remote-controlled miniature robot designed to collect oil spills from the surface of water using […]

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British biofertiliser could replace imported artificial fertilisers whose costs are soaring if the Government removes unnecessary restrictions to help farmers, according to the UK trade body representing green gas and bioresources. In an open letter of 11 March to Emma Reynolds (Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) the UK trade association for […]

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MIT researchers have developed a generative artificial intelligence-driven approach for planning long-term visual tasks, like robot navigation, that is about twice as effective as some existing techniques. Their method uses a specialized vision-language model to perceive the scenario in an image and simulate actions needed to reach a goal. Then a second model translates those […]

The “cost” of cutting UK emissions to net-zero is less than the cost of a single fossil-fuel price shock, according to a new report from the Climate Change Committee (CCC). Moreover, a net-zero economy would be almost completely protected from fossil-fuel price spikes in the future, says the government’s climate advisory body. The report is […]

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Joseph Paradiso thinks that the most engaging research questions usually span disciplines. Paradiso was trained as a physicist and completed his PhD in experimental high-energy physics at MIT in 1981. His father was a photographer and filmmaker working at MIT, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, and the MITRE Corporation, so he grew up in a house where artists, […]

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Just as Darwin’s finches evolved in response to natural selection in order to endure, the cells that make up a cancerous tumor similarly counter selective pressures in order to survive, evolve, and spread. Tumors are, in fact, complex sets of cells with their own unique structure and ability to change. Today, artificial Intelligence and machine […]

The US and Israel’s war on Iran has caused oil and gas prices to soar, with the world now preparing for the possibility of another energy crisis. The conflict, which has seen Iran respond with missile strikes across the region, has killed more than 1,000 people so far and sent global markets into disarray. With […]

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When people talk about sustainable buildings, the conversation usually starts with the visible upgrades: rooftop solar, high-efficiency HVAC, LED lighting, smart controls. Those features matter, and they often deserve the attention they get. But they are only part of the environmental story. A building’s real sustainability profile starts earlier and runs deeper. It begins with […]

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Road questioned the cost and usefulness of large glass office building types. A leading climate‑resilience architecture academic has warned that new thinking is needed in how modern buildings are designed to cope with a warming climate. (Words: Heriot-Watt University). Professor Emeritus at Heriot-Watt University Susan Roaf says most modern public and private buildings are simply […]

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Glen Finglas reservoir in the Trossachs, with soil Layers visible due to low water level. Parts of eastern Scotland have seen improvements in water resources over the winter following the 2025 drought, although some areas could still face water scarcity later this year if spring rainfall is lower than normal. According to the Scottish Environment […]