UfaBizPhoto/Shutterstock
In three different experiments, plant-based meal sales rose when there were more menu options.
Steve Allen/Shutterstock
For the first time since satellites started studying the continent, East Antarctica has lost an entire ice shelf.
Tagged pilot whales
Saana Isojunno
Whale species at higher risk of predation from killer whales are more adversely affected by the sound of sonar.
Julia Sudnitskaya/Shutterstock
New data has revealed rainfall records from as far back as 1677.
How to have your cake and eat it?
Kekyalyanen
‘Net gain’ in name, but not for nature?
Gas flares burn above oil deposits in western Siberia, Russia.
Pavel Filatov/Alamy Stock Photo
The Imagine newsletter is a weekly synthesis of academic insight into climate solutions.
MaxManin/Shutterstock
A walk can gift you fresh eyes to see otherwise forgotten or ignored aspects of your local area.
Henner Damke/shutterstock
A proposed new large-scale octopus farm in Spain is a huge risk to the welfare of this sentient and intelligent animal.
Peter H. Maltbie
The UN estimates one in four city dwellers live without access to basic services or adequate housing.
A coal power plant in Niederaussem, Germany.
Markue / shutterstock
The ‘Energiewende’ relies on gas as a bridge between a coal-powered past and renewable future.
Maksym Medvinskyi/Shutterstock
New breakwater designs and more sustainable materials can cut the carbon cost of coastal defences by 40%.
A well brings groundwater to the surface at an oasis in Egypt.
Water Alternatives Photos
Our planet’s invaluable natural store of freshwater is woefully neglected.
Inside Creative House/Shutterstock
Over 170 countries have endorsed a resolution to negotiate a plastics treaty that’s much more precise than the Paris climate change agreement.
Yuratosno3/Shutterstock
Electricity, not what the EU calls ‘renewable gases’, offer the fastest route to decarbonising heating.
Rich Baxter
Sea turtles of Aldabra were almost hunted to extinction. But thanks to years of protection the much-loved animals are now thriving again - and so is the iconic giant tortoise.
A recent protest in London against Russia’s invasion.
Robert Smith / Alamy
Behaviour change would also help tackle the climate, nature, food and fuel emergencies.
A new artificial wetland runs through the city of Ningbo, China.
Wang961201 / shutterstock
Flood threatened settlements must get everyone involved in an effort to become truly resilient cities.
Chlorella, a species of microalgae grown for the ALG-AD project in Devon.
Shutterstock
The inside of story of a pioneering programme to convert nitrogen into microalgae that can generate sustainable animal feed.
Norisk metallurgical plant in Russia produced more than half of the world’s nickel in 1997.
EPA/Vladimir Velengurin
Electric vehicle batteries, wind turbine generators and hydrogen fuel cells are among technologies likely to be affected by the conflict.
Well travelled…
Shutterstock
Your T-shirt may have travelled one-and-a-half times round the world to reach you.
Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae ) frolicking at the ocean surface.
Tony Wu/WWF
A new report shed light on the migratory routes of 1,000 whales worldwide.
Tricky_Shark/Shutterstock
Fast grocery delivery services are expanding quickly, but their long-term survival is being questioned.
EPA/Andy Rain
People can act collectively to lower their energy use in an emergency.
JARUEK_CH/Shutterstock
Resurgence of SUV sabotage highlights the failure of climate policy and an evolving protest strategy.
Valmedia/Shutterstock
How Extinction Rebellion and Fridays For Future upended the rules of environmental activism.