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legislation & regulations

British Columbia forestry staff on ladders picking spruce cones in a seed orchard managed by the province
Posted inNews

Planning and Planting Future Forests with Climate Change in Mind

by J. Besl 7 June 202128 October 2022

The climate is warming too fast for some trees to catch up. Planting seeds from warmer regions can bolster future forests, but that requires a significant shift in forestry practice.

Lake in a shape of a city in the middle of pure and fresh rain forest scenery viewed from a bird’s perspective.
Posted inNews

Chasing Carbon Unicorns

Rishika Pardikar, Science Writer by Rishika Pardikar 5 April 20216 May 2022

According to a new report, net zero targets many governments are pursuing are distractions from the urgent need to drastically reduce carbon emissions.

A large gas well sits in Pennsylvania fields and foothills.
Posted inNews

What a New Executive Order Means for Curbing Methane Emissions

Rishika Pardikar, Science Writer by Rishika Pardikar 29 January 202118 January 2022

Biden’s executive order calling for consideration of new methane regulations comes on the heels of a new global analysis of the fuel’s impact on climate change.

Research ecologist Steven Mirsky evaluates a cereal rye cover crop.
Posted inNews

Cover Crops, Sensors, and Food Security

by DJ McCauley 25 January 20214 November 2022

Forward-Thinking Ideas for the USDA’s Agriculture Innovation Agenda

Multiethnic group of people standing in a row and wearing masks at a polling station on Election Day
Posted inGeoFIZZ

Scientists Are Primed for Poll Positions

by K. McCarthy 19 January 202127 February 2023

Scientists and science communicators can lend their expertise to a growing shortage of poll workers in the United States.

A power planet in the U.S. Appalachian basin in August 2016
Posted inOpinions

Affordable Clean Energy Rule Threatens Progress of Clean Air Act

by S. Benish and M. Fiffer 18 November 202021 December 2022

The scientific community must act to minimize the adverse air quality and health impacts of relaxed EPA regulation.

A coal ash dump in the foreground with SCI in the background
Posted inFeatures

An Unfought Geoscience Battle in U.S. Prisons

Kimberly M. S. Cartier, News Writing and Production Intern for Eos.org by Kimberly M. S. Cartier 10 November 202018 October 2022

Prisoners, activists, and lawyers are fighting to protect incarcerated people from pollution and the dangers of climate change. There’s a place for geoscientists in the fight too.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks in front of the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C., during the June 2020 release of the Select Committee on the Climate Crisis majority staff report, joined by Rep. Kathy Castor, the chair of the committee.
Posted inOpinions

How Scientists Can Engage to Solve the Climate Crisis

by R. L. Martin 30 October 20206 March 2023

Policymakers need scientists. Here’s how one geoscientist contributed to a U.S. congressional report that’s already churning out legislation—and real action.

A woman walks through knee-high floodwaters in a narrow street in Assam, India.
Posted inNews

New Recommendations for a Proactive Flood Policy in India

by T. V. Padma 17 September 202026 October 2022

As India grapples with devastating monsoon floods, a new review supports greater investment in nonstructural solutions.

People stand in a scrapyard as dark smokes billows from several small fires.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Tracking Air Pollution from Ghana’s E-Waste Site

Kate Wheeling, freelance science writer by Kate Wheeling 18 August 202013 March 2023

Researchers established a relatively low cost method that could help countries with limited monitoring capabilities measure particulate pollution in their skies.

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Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

Mapping the Ocean Floor with Ancient Tides

6 May 20256 May 2025
Editors' Highlights

First Benchmarking System of Global Hydrological Models

7 May 20257 May 2025
Editors' Vox

Decoding Crop Evapotranspiration

6 May 20256 May 2025
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