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A new study finds oyster farming, once seen as a carbon source, actually captures more carbon than expected. Through filter feeding and organic carbon release, oysters may ease ocean acidification while providing sustainable food and a brighter future for climate and seas.
(c) Mitili Mitili
(c) Mitili Mitili
  • September 22, 2025

Oysters Remove Carbon from the Ocean

PHYS

A new study finds oyster farming, once seen as a carbon source, actually captures more carbon than expected. Through filter feeding and organic carbon release, oysters may ease ocean acidification while providing sustainable food and a brighter future for climate and seas.

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Off the Goto Islands, Japan has inaugurated its first large floating wind farm with eight turbines. This pioneering project strengthens renewable energy, accelerates the nation’s path to carbon neutrality by 2050, and offers a hopeful model for a greener global future.
Previous Post Japan Launches First Floating Wind Farm
Next Post New Test for Hard-To-Detect HPV-Associated Cancers
A groundbreaking blood test can spot HPV-linked head and neck cancers up to a decade before symptoms emerge. With HPV responsible for around 70% of such cancers and no screening test yet available, this breakthrough offers real hope for earlier treatment and healthier futures.

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Despite long cold winters and limited daylight, people in the Nordic region use routines, morning light therapy, and social rhythms to keep their energy and mood steady all winter long. Experts say consistent sleep, social time, light exposure, and movement can ease winter fatigue — a practical guide to staying well until spring
(c) Sébastien Goldberg

Nordic communities show how to thrive even in the darkest months

  • December 7, 2025
Captive-bred Scimitar‑horned oryx have been reintroduced to a protected reserve in Chad, recreating a free-roaming wild population. Once declared extinct in the wild, they now roam again — helping restore fragile desert ecosystems and offering real hope that extinction can be reversed.
(c) Alan J. Hendry

Scimitar-horned oryx returns to Sahara after extinction in the wild

  • December 7, 2025
A new bio-inspired filter developed at the University of Bonn uses the same gill-arch architecture as filter-feeding fish to remove more than 99 % of microplastic fibers from washing machine wastewater. Because it’s self-cleaning and clog-resistant, it could be cheaply built into future washing machines — a clear win for cleaner water and less plastic pollution.
(c) Lone Jensen

Fish-inspired washing filter captures 99 % of microplastics

  • December 7, 2025

Most Read

A recent Carbon Brief study shows China’s carbon dioxide emissions have remained unchanged or declined for 18 straight months, thanks in part to a surge in solar (+240 GW) and wind (+61 GW) capacity and a 5% drop in transport emissions.
China’s CO₂ emissions flat or falling for 18 months — analysis finds
Scientists at TU Wien have developed a non-toxic “deep-eutectic” solvent that separates blended fabrics — like cotton-polyester mixes — within minutes. Cotton stays intact and polyester is recovered almost fully, offering a near-complete recycling method for textiles that were once nearly impossible to reclaim.
New non-toxic solvent could revolutionize mixed textile recycling
At COP30 in Belém, Brazil officially created ten new Indigenous territories, including some overlapping Amazon National Park. The move, issued via presidential decree, adds legal protection to lands of groups like the Munduruku and Guarani-Kaiowá during a summit marked by protests.
Brazil grants 10 new Indigenous territories amid COP30 tensions
Researchers at the University of Cologne have discovered a powerful antibody — 04_A06 — that neutralizes around 98.5 % of over 300 tested HIV strains. In lab experiments the antibody reduced viral load to undetectable levels — a major step toward broad-spectrum therapies for prevention and treatment worldwide.
A breakthrough in the fight against HIV: new antibody blocks nearly all variants
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