Science & Technology
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Colorado Gov. Jared Polis declares statewide drought emergency
DENVER — Colorado’s state leadership on Thursday declared a drought emergency as this winter’s record-low snowpack and an abnormally warm spring fuel one of the worst statewide droughts on record.
The emergency declaration opens the door for a future request for a federal disaster declaration and aid. It also mandates that state agencies ...Read more
Trump administration is disbanding climate research during hurricane season
The Trump administration’s most recently wave of defundings directly affects North Carolinians at one of the most crucial times of the year: hurricane season.
The National Science Foundation has begun descaling their Ocean Observatories Initiative following President Donald Trump’s firing of the NSF’s independent board through an email in...Read more
Trump invokes emergency powers to invest $700 million in coal
President Donald Trump on Thursday said he will invoke Cold War-era emergency powers to direct a nearly $700 million investment into the waning coal industry, including construction of a new West Coast coal export terminal in Oakland.
Speaking from the White House, Trump said he will use the Defense Production Act, a 1950 law that grants the ...Read more
Trump invokes emergency powers to invest $700 million in coal
President Donald Trump on Thursday said he will invoke Cold War-era emergency powers to direct a nearly $700 million investment into the waning coal industry, including construction of a new West Coast coal export terminal in Oakland.
Speaking from the White House, Trump said he will use the Defense Production Act, a 1950 law that grants the ...Read more
Wildfires are reversing America’s progress on ozone pollution
For decades, the United States made steady progress in reducing surface ozone pollution, the main ingredient in smog. But that progress – made as vehicles, industries and power sources became cleaner – is increasingly being overshadowed by a different and growing source of ozone pollution: wildfires.
Our team of atmospheric and ...Read more
Space Force digs in to uncover extent of Blue Origin New Glenn explosion
The explosion of Blue Origin’s New Glenn at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station was massive, but the response by the Space Force emergency crews was quick and well-prepared.
“I had just gotten home and sat down in the living room, talking to my kids and wife, and looked out the window and saw the explosion,” said Space Launch Delta 45 ...Read more
Bison restoration efforts and grazing rights hinge on one question: Are bison wildlife?
Bison are political animals. A federal decision to revoke grazing leases for bison on public lands on the rolling plains of eastern Montana is the latest manifestation of long-standing contention. The largest land animal in North America, bison are considered a “keystone” species, meaning they have high ecological and cultural importance....Read more
Chicago litter group battles illegal dumping at newly transformed Englewood community garden
CHICAGO — When David Bippes recently brought his parents to see a small plot of land tucked between a raised railway track and a row of homes in Englewood, he was hoping to show them his latest community project.
Bippes, an Eagle Scout whose passion for community gardens began with a high school service project in Missouri, now helps lead ...Read more
PFAS in ski wax: Despite bans, these forever chemicals linger in wax rooms, study shows – so does their health risk
For more than 30 years, manufacturers of ski and snowboard waxes used PFAS – per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances – to make skis and snowboards glide faster over snow. These synthetic chemicals were highly effective and common in competitive racing just about everywhere.
Then studies began finding PFAS in human bodies, and research...Read more
Nevada may ease Colorado River worries with California ocean desalination deal
Sipping freshly desalinated water from the Pacific Ocean, water managers from Nevada, Arizona and California ushered in what could become a game-changing agreement for the drought-stricken American West.
Because San Diego has excess water available in its larger portfolio of supply, Nevada and Arizona officials are exploring how their states �...Read more
Spotted lanternflies are reemerging in Maryland. Here's what to know
It’s that time of year again — spotted lanternflies have made a comeback across Maryland and most of the eastern U.S.
Spotted lanternflies typically hatch in late April and early May, meaning juveniles of the species are popping up around the state. The Maryland Department of Agriculture predicted in March that Baltimore City and central ...Read more
Space Florida to fund ocean-based space launch company, other secretive projects
Space Florida continues to hold things close to the vest with several ongoing projects as it tries to attract aerospace business to the state — but did reveal the company behind what they had dubbed “Project Manta” to be Seagate Space, for which the state agency will help fund an offshore launch platform.
The state’s aerospace finance ...Read more
Gotion wants Michigan township to pay the $23.7M it owes in incentives
DETROIT — Gotion Inc. has asked a federal judge to order the Michigan township where it was supposed to call home to repay the roughly $23.7 million it owes the state in taxpayer-funded incentives.
Green Township's actions opposing Gotion's planned battery parts plant made it all but impossible to move forward, the company argued, leaving ...Read more
Northeast Philadelphia Airport could soon run on 100% solar power
A large solar array is being planned to fully power Northeast Philadelphia Airport (PNE).
A bill that still needs approval by City Council would authorize a contractor to build a 1.5-megawatt solar farm. In return, the city would purchase the energy for the airport for 25 years at a set rate.
It would become the largest municipal on-site solar...Read more
Catherine Thorbecke: What if AI retraining is just a comforting lie?
No one knows whether AI will trigger a white-collar jobpocalypse. The loudest warnings still come from people building and selling the technology, whose predictions often double as hype-mongering or cover for unrelated cost cutting with investor-friendly language. Think-tank and analyst forecasts are no less vertiginous.
The honest answer is ...Read more
Value of Huntington Beach defense tech startup balloons to $1.8 billion
LOS ANGELES — California defense tech startup Mach Industries said Tuesday it raised $300 million, nearly quadrupling the company's valuation to $1.8 billion within a year.
The Huntington Beach startup's soaring valuation underscores how defense tech funding is booming as armed conflicts such as the Iran war and the Russian-Ukrainian war ...Read more
Parmy Olson: Google's AI shift is causing a collective freak-out
When Google recently announced radical changes to its search tool that will overshadow the page of blue links we’ve been used to seeing for more than a decade, online advertisers had something of a collective freak-out. The Alphabet Inc.-owned company called it the biggest such shift in more than 25 years, and that the search bar would be “...Read more
Gadgets: Portable air conditioner
For whatever reason, you might need a portable air conditioner: your central system goes out, you need cooling in a space that is without AC, or you don’t want to cool the entire house and instead just cool the room where you sleep. If so, the Zafro 16,000 BTU portable air conditioner can be a practical solution.
My experience with AC units...Read more
Jim Rossman: Do smart TV apps become outdated?
This week’s topic comes from a 71-year-old reader and it concerns TV.
“Do TVs need replacing because their software becomes outdated?” and “We have an antenna and sometimes (one local channel) pixelates and becomes unwatchable. How would I get that same channel without an antenna? I need a remote with number buttons, and I don’t ...Read more
Political play or budget fix? Competition for NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab management comes at a fraught moment
LOS ANGELES — Weeks after Trump administration officials announced that management of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory would open to competitive bidding for the first time, questions remain as to why Caltech could lose control of the lab its researchers founded in 1936.
On one hand, observers note, high-profile delays and cost overruns on ...Read more
Popular Stories
- Bison restoration efforts and grazing rights hinge on one question: Are bison wildlife?
- Wildfires are reversing America’s progress on ozone pollution
- Chicago litter group battles illegal dumping at newly transformed Englewood community garden
- PFAS in ski wax: Despite bans, these forever chemicals linger in wax rooms, study shows – so does their health risk
- A lot of ‘recycled’ plastic is being burned overseas – and causing widespread pollution linked to health problems





