Death Tourism
Show must go on
Hydrogen powered Microcab
Blair criticised
In court
Porrit's new clothes
Industrial air pollution has high economic cost, finds study
The UK has 10 of Europe’s top 50 super-polluting power stations and factories
In Short
Cycle or walk to work to reduce weight
New study finds link between lower body weight and active mode of transportation
Britain gets special police force to check food crimes
All recommendations of food expert likely to be accepted by government
'Stop soft-pedalling'
European Commission cuts fishing quota for members
Move will affect 10 countries in Europe
Africa loses more money than it gets in aid
While annual global aid is less than $30 billion, the continent incurs loss of $58 billion every year
EU lifts ban on import of Indian mangoes
Decision taken after ‘significant improvements’ in India’s export system
Let's take a less bigoted view of history
With DNA adding to the slippery narratives about the past; historians, archeologists, and geneticists need to collaborate if we are to take a …
Climate Emergency CoP 25: The inadequacy of net zero
The European Commission's Green New Deal's ambigously worded 'climate neutrality' target is concerning
Climate Emergency CoP 25: Europe’s Kafkaesque progress on climate action
The European Green New Deal is a pale imitation of the American original
Climate emergency: A question of semantics?
Framing the changing climate as an emergency is preventing progress towards climate action
New CoP president’s first foreign engagement disappoints
In addition to being regressive on equity, ambition and markets, Claire O'Neill also has disturbing ideas about the new mantras of 'net zero'…
Global Eco Watch: Greenland’s ice sheet has melted to ‘point of no return’
Down To Earth brings you the top happenings in the world of global ecology
Global Eco Watch: ‘Strongest storm on Earth’ in 2020, slams into the Philippines
Global Eco Watch: Will Britain fall, ask folklorists after raven disappears from the Tower of London
Har Gobind Khorana: The chemist who cracked DNA’s code and made the first artificial gene was born into poverty 100 years ago in an Indian village
Khorana’s legacy has also suffered from neglect that may be a result of racial bias. But this neglect is changing, as a new generation of …
Food as history: Cambridge studies cast new light on early Anglo-Saxon kings’ relations with peasants by studying their diets
The studies note that social status did not lead to kings and nobles eating more meat than peasants; but once a year, both did gorge on animals …
Bring back wolves, lynxes to Britain and Ireland, study urges
Restoring native predator populations could help to keep in check some of the most problematic invasive species around the world, the new study said