❌

Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Yesterday β€” 24 July 2025NPR Topics: Environment
Before yesterdayNPR Topics: Environment

Is better human health hidden in the sea?

21 July 2025 at 07:00
Many invertebrates living in the sunlight zone of the ocean have "superpowers," as marine biologist Drew Harvell calls them: They can regenerate limbs, are especially strong or can even steal the abilities of other animals.

For this week's Sea Camp, we're diving below the ocean's surface to explore the sunlight zone, the portion of ocean that's 0-200 meters deep. Here, we zoom in on some spineless inhabitants envied for their "superpowers." Marine biologist Drew Harvell tells us about stealthy sea slugs, sea stars with super strength and life-saving sponges.

Also, exciting news!! WE HAVE A NEWSLETTER! It lets you go even deeper with the marine research each week of Sea Camp. Sign up here!

Plus,
check out the comic we commissioned to accompany this episode!

Want to hear more stories about underwater marvels? Email us and let us know at shortwave@npr.org.

Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at
plus.npr.org/shortwave.

(Image credit: Roberto Moiola/Sysaworld)

The Downstream Effects of China's Rare Earth Mining

18 July 2025 at 19:30
Bundit Pantarakon stands along the Sai river in Mai Sai, where the Thai Army is building flood control barriers along the river that forms the border between Thailand and Myanmar.

China has nearly cornered the market in rare earth minerals, which are a necessary component to much of our technology today. But China sources some of those rare earths and other heavy metals from neighboring Myanmar. And the ramped up in production there is causing downstream environmental concerns in Thailand. We go to Thailand to understand the issue.

Do you clean up ocean trash if it's part of a vibrant ecosystem?

14 July 2025 at 07:00
A <em>Glaucus atlanticus</em> eats a <em>Porpita.</em> Both are residents of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

For this second installment of the Sea Camp series, we explore the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. It's the largest of five gigantic garbage patches in the sea. These patches hang out at the nexus of the world's ocean currents, changing shape with the waves. These areas were long thought to have been uninhabited, the plastics and fishing gear too harmful to marine life. But researchers have uncovered a whole ecosystem of life in this largest collection of trash. Today, with the help of marine biologist Fiona Chong, we meet the tiny marine life that calls this place home.

Also, exciting news!! WE HAVE A NEWSLETTER! It lets you go even deeper with the marine research each week of Sea Camp. Sign up here!

Interested in hearing more sea stories? Tell us by emailing shortwave@npr.org!

Listen to every episode of Short Wave sponsor-free and support our work at NPR by signing up for Short Wave+ at
plus.npr.org/shortwave.

(Image credit: Oxford Scientific)

When old oil wells become 'orphans,' that's a problem

11 July 2025 at 20:38
A pumpjack operates at an oil well in Gray Horse, Okla., in 2023. The U.S. contains millions of old petroleum wells, many of which remain unplugged.

All across the U.S., there are aging oil and natural gas wells no longer in use.

A lot of them don't have anyone on the hook to seal them up. Some estimate over a million such "orphan wells" still exist.

Because they haven't been plugged, they're still leaking greenhouse gases and other chemicals into the atmosphere and into the land around them.

What would it take to plug them β€” or even just one of them?

For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.

Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

(Image credit: Chandan Khanna)

After devastating floods a Central Texas community comes together

10 July 2025 at 00:10
Coach Tate DeMasco, Athletic Director and Head Football Coach for Ingram Tom Moore High School in Ingram, Tx.,  delivers hot meals and cold drinks to neighborhoods and relief workers along the Guadalupe River that were heavily impacted by the 4th of July flooding. The meals are provided by Mercy Chefs, a disaster and humanitarian relief organization.

It's been nearly a week since devastating flooding tore through Kerr County, Texas killing more than a hundred people.

Now, after unimaginable tragedy, residents are coming together to help each other move forward.

NPR's Juana Summers and producers Erika Ryan and Tyler Bartlam visited the City West Church, which has transformed from a house of worship into a pop up food distribution site serving thousands of meals to the community and first responders.

For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.

Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

❌
❌