A study of 2,960 Chinese firms (2008–2020) found that corporate environmental publicity boosts green patents – but mostly low-effort, strategic ones.

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A new study shows that if the top 24% of global emitters adopted low-carbon lifestyles, household emissions could fall by 10.4 Gt CO₂e – over 30% of the global total.

A study of 150 countries finds fiscal policy can reduce CO₂ – but only in high-income nations

A new study found pesticides alter gut bacteria growth and metabolism, triggering inflammation-linked lipid changes that may affect human health.

A new study shows that melting sea ice narrows the range of underwater light, shifting it toward blue

A new study finds that democratic countries often appear greener because they offshore pollution to less democratic nations.

From 2006–2020, people in the Western US faced 32 days a year, on average, of extreme heat, wildfire smoke, or nearby fires

A new study finds that AI cannot predict the stock market. AI models often give misleading results

Bud dormancy is a crucial adaptation for perennial fruit plants, enabling them to withstand unfavorable growth conditions, a recent study found EARLY BUD BREAK and SHORT VEGETATIVE PHASE 4 integrate ABA plant hormone signaling control of grape bud dormancy

This study shows that changes in how the brain processes a key protein (amyloid-beta) can help predict when symptoms of inherited Alzheimer’s start – no matter which gene is affected.

A new study finds that CO₂ and CH₄ emissions in Africa significantly increase surface temperature, which in turn drives sea level rise – threatening millions in coastal regions.

Making green hydrogen can be cheaper and safer without using membrane and producing oxygen at the same time or same place.

A new study finds clear evidence that human-caused climate change has intensified fire weather across western North America over the past 50+ years.

Dietary associations with reduced epigenetic age: a secondary data analysis of the methylation diet and lifestyle study

A new study shows that even if we overshoot 1.5 °C and cool back down, glacier melt and reduced runoff will continue for centuries – some changes are irreversible.

A new study finds 86% of global croplands now face more soil exposure to climate extremes – risking carbon loss, erosion, and food security.

Explosion of formulaic research articles, including inappropriate study designs and false discoveries, based on the NHANES US national health database

A new study shows that English textbooks for young learners are being written for children who can’t yet read — leaving teachers to abandon official materials and improvise lessons

A new study analysed 226 sludge samples from wastewater treatment plants across 6 continents

Risk for SARS-CoV-2 Infection was highest in occupational groups who had to keep working, like meat processing, cleaning, cargo handling and cooking, social workers…

Advancements in bladder cancer treatment: The synergy of radiation and immunotherapy

Livestock farm air contains high levels of antibiotic resistance genes – up to 7× more than urban air – posing serious health risks

Influence of rapamycin on safety and healthspan metrics after one year: PEARL trial results

Examining frailty phenotypes of community-dwelling older adults in Taiwan using the falls risk for older people in the community – Taiwan version (Tw-FROP-Com)

A new global analysis shows 1 in 4 assessed wild animal species face extinction – and climate change is an escalating threat

Fisetin ameliorates vascular smooth muscle cell calcification via DUSP1-dependent p38 MAPK inhibition

Wai Wai teachers in Brazil co-authored a school grammar written entirely in their native language

Zebrafish have been shown to evolve both higher heat tolerance & also improved cold tolerance

Groundbreaking Discovery: Scientists Successfully Reverse Aging in Human Cells Using CRISPR Gene Editing

A 70-year-old reading test still used in schools requires exact word matches—often misjudging real comprehension

“Tiger mom” parenting boosts teens' cognitive skills but undermines emotional development, study suggests