#reduced-daylight

[ follow ]
Science
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Who Gets to Block the Sun?

Stardust Solutions aims to develop solar geoengineering technology to cool the planet, despite skepticism and concerns over safety and trust.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Arctic ice loss brings dual heatwaves to Europe and eastern Asia

The study highlights how rapid Arctic warming increases the frequency of extreme weather events, particularly concurrent heatwaves across Europe and eastern Asia.
Europe news
#data-centers
fromFuturism
2 days ago
OMG science

Data Centers Causing Huge Temperature Spikes for Miles Around Them, Study Suggests

Data science
fromThe Walrus
1 day ago

Data Centres Are on Track to Wreck the Planet. Can We Stop Them? | The Walrus

Hyperscaled data centers consume massive power and water, raising concerns about their environmental impact.
OMG science
fromFuturism
2 days ago

Data Centers Causing Huge Temperature Spikes for Miles Around Them, Study Suggests

Data centers are creating heat islands, raising land temperatures by up to 16 degrees Fahrenheit and affecting over 340 million people.
Environment
fromFortune
6 days ago

Data centers aren't breaking the grid. A broken grid is | Fortune

A new Senate bill misidentifies data centers as the problem, while the real issue lies in an outdated and underbuilt electrical grid.
#california
Environment
fromSFGATE
21 hours ago

Why California's in a 'snow drought' even after a wet winter

California's April 1 snowpack is the second lowest on record due to warm temperatures melting snow quickly.
Environment
fromLos Angeles Times
2 days ago

April 1 is supposed to be peak snow in California. Forget that this year

California's Sierra Nevada snowpack is at 18% of average due to record heat and climate change, impacting water systems and increasing wildfire risks.
fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

Fewer heat-related deaths in 2025 despite warmest summer

The UK Health Security Agency reported around 1,504 heat-associated deaths in England during summer 2025, roughly half the predicted 3,039, despite the season being the warmest on record.
UK news
Renovation
fromArchDaily
1 day ago

Designed Comfort, Purchased Comfort: Passive Design and Air Conditioning in Hong Kong

Widespread reliance on air conditioning has significantly altered architectural design incentives, particularly in Hong Kong.
#middle-east-conflict
World politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 days ago

What can nations do to make up for the ongoing energy shortfall?

The Middle East conflict has disrupted 20% of the world's fuel supply, prompting countries to seek alternative energy sources.
World politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
3 days ago

What can nations do to make up for the ongoing energy shortfall?

The Middle East conflict has disrupted 20% of the world's fuel supply, prompting countries to seek alternative energy sources.
World politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 days ago

What can nations do to make up for the ongoing energy shortfall?

The Middle East conflict has disrupted 20% of the world's fuel supply, prompting countries to seek alternative energy sources.
World politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
3 days ago

What can nations do to make up for the ongoing energy shortfall?

The Middle East conflict has disrupted 20% of the world's fuel supply, prompting countries to seek alternative energy sources.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Shake Off Winter Blues: Brain-Healthy Habits for This Spring

Tracking happiness too closely can reduce enjoyment; supporting gut health and replacing bad habits with healthier ones can enhance overall well-being.
#architecture
Design
fromwww.archdaily.com
2 days ago

Light, Lighter, Lightest: ArchDaily's April Editorial Focus

Building lightly is an ecological and ethical imperative shaped by environmental concerns and technological advancements.
Design
fromwww.archdaily.com
2 days ago

Light, Lighter, Lightest: ArchDaily's April Editorial Focus

Building lightly is an ecological and ethical imperative shaped by environmental concerns and technological advancements.
Los Angeles
fromLos Angeles Times
4 days ago

Dramatic weather shift brings significant Southern California cooldown, possible rain

Southern California will experience a brief cooldown and slight chance of rain, contrasting with recent record-high temperatures.
UK politics
fromMail Online
5 days ago

Is YOUR hometown a solar panel hotspot? Use our map to find out

Labour's push for solar panels faces criticism for being impractical and costly amid rising household bills.
#climate-change
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks ago

Earth's days are getting longer at an unprecedented rate. Climate change is to blame

Rising sea levels from climate change are slowing Earth's rotation, adding 1.33 milliseconds per century to day length at an unprecedented rate for at least 3.6 million years.
Miscellaneous
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Winter getting shorter in 80% of major US cities, new data shows

Winter is 9 days shorter on average across US cities today compared to 1970-1997, with 80% of major cities experiencing shortened winters due to climate change.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Can We Measure Climate Change's Impact on Mental Health?

Climate change significantly impacts mental health, but tracking these effects is challenging due to inadequate data and attribution issues.
OMG science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

What are zettajoules and what do they tell us about Earth's energy imbalance?

The Earth's energy imbalance is increasing, leading to dangerous warming and extreme weather events.
Environment
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

The Alaskan permafrost is thawing. Here's why that's so worrying

Thawing permafrost in Alaska is releasing three trillion gallons of water annually, exacerbating climate change and disrupting ocean ecosystems.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks ago

Earth's days are getting longer at an unprecedented rate. Climate change is to blame

Rising sea levels from climate change are slowing Earth's rotation, adding 1.33 milliseconds per century to day length at an unprecedented rate for at least 3.6 million years.
#daylight-saving-time
Canada news
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Time for a change: British Columbia decides to keep daylight saving time permanently

British Columbia will permanently adopt Pacific Standard Time, ending biannual clock changes and joining Creston's unique time zone status after nearly 70 years of misalignment with neighboring communities.
California
fromLos Angeles Times
3 weeks ago

Daylight saving time returns, despite perennial politicking to stop the switch

Most Americans oppose daylight saving time but remain divided on whether to adopt permanent standard time or permanent daylight saving time year-round.
Health
fromMail Online
1 week ago

Top scientists call for the biannual clock change to be ABOLISHED

Top scientists advocate for ending Daylight Saving Time due to health risks like cancer, traffic accidents, and sleep issues.
Boston
fromBoston.com
3 weeks ago

Should Massachusetts stop changing its clocks?

Massachusetts lawmakers are debating legislation to end twice-yearly clock changes and adopt a permanent time system to reduce health disruptions and improve productivity.
Pets
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 weeks ago

The surprising science behind why daylight saving time is good for wildlife

Daylight saving time reduces animal-vehicle collisions by shifting evening commute hours away from peak animal activity at dusk.
Canada news
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Time for a change: British Columbia decides to keep daylight saving time permanently

British Columbia will permanently adopt Pacific Standard Time, ending biannual clock changes and joining Creston's unique time zone status after nearly 70 years of misalignment with neighboring communities.
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Visible from space': why Spain has the world's biggest concentration of greenhouses

More than 30,000 hectares of land are covered in plastic, a geometric labyrinth five times the size of Manhattan, where 3.5m tons of vegetables are produced every year from tomatoes to cucumbers, peppers to courgettes, aubergines to melons, enough to feed half a billion people and generate a turnover of more than 3bn euros.
Madrid food
Environment
fromFortune
2 days ago

Data centers are so hot, their 'heat island' effect is raising temperatures up to 6 miles away and impacting 343 million people worldwide, study finds | Fortune

AI infrastructure is creating a 'data heat island effect' that raises local temperatures and impacts millions of people.
Non-profit organizations
fromNature
1 week ago

'Continuity over novelty': why environmental science needs to rethink its focus

The closure of forest-service research offices threatens long-term ecological research and institutional memory in the US.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Why Your Brain Feels Off After a Day Indoors

Indoor environments lead to mental fatigue due to lack of variation, while brief outdoor exposure can enhance focus and mood.
OMG science
fromWIRED
1 week ago

One Way or Another, Most of Our Electricity Comes From Solar Power

Electric power generation primarily relies on the interaction between magnets and coils, with various methods to induce motion.
Europe news
fromIndependent
6 days ago

How working from home could take the steam out of the energy crisis

Remote working may alleviate cost pressures and reduce fuel demand amid rising prices due to global instability.
#snowpack
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

On a whole other level': rapid snow melt-off in American west stuns scientists

Record-low snowpack levels in the American West threaten water supply due to a historically warm winter and rapid melt-off.
fromEarth911
2 weeks ago

Should You Go Solar In 2026?

The most consequential shift for anyone considering rooftop solar in 2026 is the expiration of Section 25D, the Residential Clean Energy Credit. That 30% credit, which was worth up to $9,000 on a $30,000 system, is no longer available for home solar installations. The One Big Beautiful Bill, signed July 4, 2025, accelerated the phase-out that the Inflation Reduction Act had originally extended through 2034.
SF real estate
fromArchDaily
3 weeks ago

Light from Above: Measuring and Designing Daylight Under Sloped Roofs

From Alpine chalets shedding snow to Mediterranean roof tiles mitigating summer heat, the slope responded to climate and construction challenges long before it became an aesthetic code. Although modern architecture has favored horizontal planes and orthogonal plans, the pitched roof requires a project to be conceived in section.
Miscellaneous
Environment
fromTheregister
2 days ago

AI datacenters create heat islands around them, paper finds

Datacenters significantly raise surrounding temperatures, impacting communities up to 10 km away, with average increases between 1.5°C and 2.4°C.
Design
fromArchDaily
2 weeks ago

Rethinking Architecture at the Scale of Planetary Systems

Contemporary architecture operates within interconnected technological systems—energy networks, data infrastructures, and global logistics—that fundamentally shape what can be built, its affordability, performance, and waste production.
#building-integrated-photovoltaics
OMG science
fromMail Online
2 weeks ago

Spring has officially sprung! Sun shines directly over equator today

The Vernal Equinox marks the start of spring, with the sun's path moving north until the summer solstice.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Restoring Our Natural Rhythms

Contraction—periods of decline, loss, and slowdown—offers essential insight and renewal that expansion alone cannot provide, and embracing it enables fuller living.
San Francisco
fromsfist.com
4 weeks ago

Thursday Morning What's Up: Prepping for Daylight Saving Spring Forward

San Francisco rents decline in Bayview and Parkmerced while rising elsewhere, threatening the stalled Parkmerced redevelopment project after 15 years.
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

Spring equinox 2026: Time, meaning, and the science behind the turning of the seasons

The tilt of the Earth's axis as it orbits around the sun causes seasons. Different parts of the world receive different amounts of sunlight depending on that angle. In the Northern Hemisphere, we experience winter from December to March, while the Southern Hemisphere soaks up the sun.
OMG science
Environment
fromNature
4 days ago

How buildings and cities can be aligned with life

Buildings currently harm the environment, but regenerative design can restore ecological systems and reduce waste through nature-inspired strategies.
Environment
fromwww.dw.com
6 days ago

Solar is winning the energy race

Solar power is rapidly scaling, becoming the world's cheapest energy source and surpassing coal, gas, and nuclear in capacity and usage.
Health
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
4 weeks ago

These two tricks can help your body adjust to daylight saving time

Morning light exposure and early exercise together stabilize circadian rhythms and ease daylight saving time transitions, reducing sleep disruption and health complications.
fromwww.dw.com
6 days ago

Earth Hour: Monuments to go dark as 20th edition kicks off

"Currently, the climate crisis is repeatedly pushed into the background in light of the many global challenges. However, it doesn't disappear. On the contrary, it exacerbates many of these crises."
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Extreme heat lab: enduring the climate of the future

"So whenever people think about hot weather, they always talk about the temperature," he says. "There's two issues with that. First of all, most people don't realise that the temperature is measured in the shade. So if you're in direct solar radiation, the amount of heat stress you're exposed to is much greater as it will stress your body out a lot more."
Public health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Yes to fields of wheat, no to fields of iron': how the world's greenest country soured on solar

We say yes to fields of wheat, and we say no to fields of iron! Jernmarker, or iron fields, was chosen as the Danish word of the year in December after the solar backlash swayed municipal elections and prompted some councils to pull projects.
Environment
Artificial intelligence
fromTechCrunch
1 month ago

Sam Altman would like remind you that humans use a lot of energy, too | TechCrunch

Modern AI systems do not require large amounts of water; total energy use is a valid concern that calls for rapid transition to clean power.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Blistering early-season heatwave threatens California and other western states

An early-season heatwave will bring temperatures 20-30°F above normal across western US states, threatening daily and all-time March records while intensifying drought concerns amid record low snowpack.
#seasonal-affective-disorder
#circadian-rhythm
fromArchDaily
3 weeks ago

How Architecture Is Learning to Generate Its Own Energy

Photovoltaic (PV) solar energy represents a modular technology that can be manufactured in large-scale facilities, generating economies of scale, while also being adaptable to small-scale applications. From residential rooftop systems to large-scale power generation installations, photovoltaic solar energy has established itself as a cost-effective option for electricity production in many countries around the world.
Environment
fromAeon
1 month ago

In solarpunk cities of the future, tech follows nature's lead | Aeon Essays

In Indra's Net of pearls and jewels, every gem reflects every other, a shimmering image of interdependence. This ancient Vedic metaphor for connection across the cosmos also illuminates what the environmental philosopher Glenn Albrecht first proposed in 2014as 'theSymbiocene': the era after the Anthropocene, in which human technologies take their cues from living systems and work in partnership rather than through dominance.
Philosophy
Gadgets
fromZDNET
2 months ago

This near-infrared light could bring the benefits of the sun to your monitor

A USB-C Sunbooster device delivers daily near-infrared light to laptops and monitors to increase indoor sunlight exposure and track dosage.
Agriculture
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Solar grazing: triple-win' for sheep farmers, renewables and society or just a PR exercise for energy companies?

Free solar grazing on solar farms enables farmers to expand flocks, reduce land costs, and cut vegetation-management expenses significantly.
Public health
fromWIRED
1 month ago

Rising Temperatures Are Taking a Toll on Sleep Health

Heat and urban air pollution (PM2.5 and nitrogen dioxide) increase upper-airway collapsibility and inflammation, raising risk and severity of obstructive sleep apnea.
UK news
fromwww.standard.co.uk
2 months ago

London's first 5pm sunset of 2026 will fall on this date

Days in London are lengthening; sunset will be after 5pm by February 8 and after 6pm about five weeks later.
Philosophy
fromAeon
2 months ago

A breezy ode to wind ponders its power, beauty and utility | Aeon Videos

Wind Keepers cinematically reveals how wind shapes daily life in Viana do Castelo through intimate images and collaborative student filmmaking.
Environment
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 weeks ago

Letters: Global warming isn't a hoax; it's a scientific consensus

Scientific consensus from 97-99% of climate scientists confirms Earth is warming primarily due to human activity, not natural cycles alone.
fromArs Technica
1 month ago

New critique debunks claim that trees can sense a solar eclipse

"Granted, "[p]lants have extensive and well established mechanisms of communication, with that of volatiles being the most well studied and understood," he added. "There is also growing recognition that root exudates play a role in plant-plant interactions, though this is only now being deeply investigated. Nothing else, communication through mychorriza, has withstood independent investigation."
Science
#climate-acceleration
fromNature
4 weeks ago
Environment

The world is getting hotter faster - its pace nearly doubled in the past decade

fromNature
4 weeks ago
Environment

The world is getting hotter faster - its pace nearly doubled in the past decade

fromArchDaily
1 month ago

When Light Meets Energy in Glass Ceilings

From the large industrial roofs and galleries of the 19th century to the contemporary atriums of museums and public buildings, glass has been a recurring material in shaping large and monumental interior spaces. More than a technological or engineering solution, these horizontal glazed planes introduce a distinct luminous quality: light that comes from above. Unlike lateral daylight entering through façades, zenithal light is more evenly distributed, reduces harsh shadows, and lends spaces a sense of continuity and openness that is difficult to achieve otherwise.
Design
fromArchDaily
2 months ago

Self-Sufficient Facades: Where Solar Protection Meets Renewable Energy

Spaces of light and darkness are conceived to enhance circulation and spatial directionality, as well as to highlight the colors, textures, and forms of specific architectural elements. That said, the impact of natural light on building facades reveals the need to develop strategies that support energy savings, improve the thermal and visual comfort of interior spaces, and promote the reduction of carbon emissions.
Design
Environment
fromThe Mercury News
1 month ago

Low snowpack, higher temperatures cause concern for Bay Area scientists, farmers

March precipitation in higher elevations is critical for California's water security as snowpack remains significantly below average despite February storms and warm winter conditions.
Environment
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 month ago

Opinion: AI is destroying our planet. We must act to check its growth and save ourselves.

AI's environmental impact is severe, with 2025 freshwater consumption exceeding global bottled water use and projected energy demands by 2034 matching India's entire consumption, requiring immediate action.
fromEsquire
2 months ago

4 Best Bright Light Therapy Lamps to Get You Through the Winter

When should I use my bright light therapy lamp? You should use it every morning (as soon as possible after waking up) during the months when you experience SAD symptoms. It is not advised to use a bright light therapy lamp in the afternoon or evening, as it can mess with your circadian rhythm/sleep cycle. You should try to use it for 20-30 minutes each day.
Health
Environment
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Can Shading Become Energy? From Passive Facades to Productive Envelopes

Facades can generate significant renewable energy by integrating colored photovoltaic shutters that combine shading, daylight control, and electricity production without adding envelope complexity.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Study finds global increase in hot, dry days ideal for wildfires

Hot, dry, windy days ideal for extreme wildfires have nearly tripled globally over 45 years; human-caused climate change drives over half of that increase.
Environment
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Forests Are Steadily Crawling North, Satellite Imagery Shows

Boreal forests are shifting northward and expanding due to warming, altering carbon sequestration potential and increasing young forest cover.
Environment
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Earth on Track to Become Uninhabitable, Scientists Say

Multiple Earth systems are approaching destabilization, risking cascading tipping points that could commit the planet to a high-temperature 'hothouse Earth' trajectory.
Environment
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Think this is bad? Scientists say UK winters will get even WETTER

UK winter rainfall increases about 7% per 1°C of global warming, escalating flood risk and mirroring changes predicted two decades ahead.
Environment
fromFast Company
2 months ago

These super-insulating windows are as energy-efficient as walls-and could help save the power grid

Vacuum-insulated windows deliver R18 performance, cut building energy use up to 45%, reduce grid electricity demand, and pay back within three to seven years.
[ Load more ]