Today’s Solutions: April 23, 2026

Prada just signed a loan with

Prada just signed a loan with interest rates tied to sustainable action

For the first time ever, a luxury brand has signed a loan that is linked to sustainability goals. That brand is Prada, and it has signed a £42.9 million loan with the banking group, Crédit Agricole, with repayment terms conditional on meeting key targets around the sustainability of its products Read More...

After the nuclear disaster, Fu

After the nuclear disaster, Fukushima is being transformed into a clean energy hub

Like a phoenix rising from the ashes, Japan’s northeastern prefecture of Fukushima is recovering awesomely from the nuclear disaster that struck in 2011. The disaster, which was triggered by an earthquake, wreaked havoc on the energy hub and created toxic conditions in the wider area. But, Read More...

Scientists have photographed a

Scientists have photographed a mouse deer for the first time in nearly 30 years

In a testament to the Earth’s ability to continually surprise us, scientists in Vietnam have successfully photographed a species not seen for nearly 30 years. That species is known as the mouse deer, a rabbit-sized animal that despite the name, is neither mouse nor deer. Instead, its the Read More...

A group of US hospitals is set

A group of US hospitals is set to invest $700 million into affordable housing

Health problems have a deeper root than just genetic defects or contact with germs and viruses. Often enough, they have to do with the greater problems that affect communities, such as low-access to healthy food or lack of affordable housing, which can exacerbate stress as people work longer hours Read More...

How “Climate Strike” becam

How “Climate Strike” became Collins dictionary’s word of the year

It’s funny how quickly the English language adopts new words and phrases that were on nobody’s tongues last year. A good example of this phenomenon is the phrase “Climate strike”, which was featured on plenty of news headlines this year and rapidly became something we hear on a daily Read More...

Studies suggest humor is effec

Studies suggest humor is effective for engaging the public about climate change

Although the climate crisis is certainly a dark issue to communicate to people, three studies this year have come to the conclusion that using humor may be the most effective way to engage the public about the crisis. In March 2017, the American Psychological Association published a Read More...

No state is more prepared for

No state is more prepared for a transition to 100% clean energy than Colorado

At the moment, Colorado only generates a fraction of its electricity using clean energy sources. Despite this, there’s perhaps no state that is better poised for a full-scale transition to clean energy. For one thing, thanks to its bountiful sunlight and wind, Colorado has enormous potential Read More...

We cannot overestimate how imp

We cannot overestimate how important fungi is for storing carbon in soil

Humans have long relied on fungi for sustenance and, er, inspiration. With that said, scientists are only just discovering how incredibly important fungi are for the Earth’s ability to store carbon. Human activity, especially large-scale agriculture, has severely affected a delicate and Read More...

Oslo wants to become the world

Oslo wants to become the world’s first zero-emission port. Here’s how

Cargo shipping is a massive contributor to emissions, and shipping technology has not quite reached the level where we can suddenly swap fossil fuel-burning engines for electric ones. This makes decarbonizing a port a difficult process, which is something many cities are trying to do one step at a Read More...

Russia has finally released th

Russia has finally released the last beluga whales from its “whale jail”

Russia’s notorious “whale jail” is no more. In November of 2018, conservationists shared drone footage of a huge whale enclosure in Russia’s Far East coast. An estimated 10 orcas and 87 beluga whales were once held at the facility, which consisted of cramped, ice-covered enclosures in a Read More...