Today’s Solutions: May 08, 2026

Audi quits Le Mans to focus on

Audi quits Le Mans to focus on electric car racing

BERLIN Audi will end its involvement in the prestigious Le Mans sports car race next year after almost two decades to focus on racing electric cars, symbolizing a shift in strategy as parent company Volkswagen battles to recover from an emissions scandal. Audi, which is seeking to boost the share Read More...

L.A. could remove 100,000 cars

L.A. could remove 100,000 cars over five years . . . By adding more cars?

A new raft of plans to get 100,000 cars off the roads in the next five years contains one amazing, only-in-L.A. proposal: adding almost 10,000 cars. A new report from the nonprofit Shared-Use Mobility Center envisions, among many other sensible ideas, adding 8,400 cars to the city’s car-share Read More...

Meet the tiny towns taking on

Meet the tiny towns taking on climate change

Ugh! Everything is miserable, you might be thinking, plopping down on the couch. Climate change is too big and I’m too tired to deal with it. I’m just going to sit here watch Netflix for eternity. Not so fast, lazypants. Take some inspiration from the tiny communities around the world Read More...

Prince of Wales joins global s

Prince of Wales joins global soil boosting project

The Prince of Wales is joining an Anglo-French government initiative to improve the condition of global soils. Ministers from both governments are meeting the prince to discuss how to improve soil health and reduce greenhouse gas emissions from farming. Typically the focus of cutting greenhouse Read More...

Sweden is on target to run ent

Sweden is on target to run entirely on renewable energy by 2040

Sweden is on target to run entirely on renewable energy within the next 25 years, a regulatory official has said. Last year, 57 per cent of Sweden's power came from renewables such as hydropower and wind sources, with the remainder coming from nuclear power.  The country now plans to tap into its Read More...

Improved water splitting advan

Improved water splitting advances renewable energy conversion

Washington State University researchers have found a way to more efficiently create hydrogen from water -- an important key in making renewable energy production and storage viable. The researchers, led by professors Yuehe Lin and Scott Beckman in the School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Read More...

Climate-resilient organic cott

Climate-resilient organic cotton stages a comeback

On the outskirts of Raichur, once known as Karnataka’s cotton city, Ramesh Rangappa proudly shows off his recently planted acre of organic cotton. “It’s rain-fed and we haven’t added any chemical fertiliser,” he says. Although there hasn’t been any rain in recent Read More...

Dutch students use hemp and fl

Dutch students use hemp and flex fibers to build ‘biobridge’ for foot traffic

The clean sustainable economy requires more than the use of renewable energy. The building industry is very dependent on fossil resources as well. That’s why a technical university experimented with building bridge using only biocomposite materials. The foot bridge was constructed out of hemp and Read More...

15% of Australia’s tomatoes

15% of Australia’s tomatoes are grown without soil, fresh water or fossil fuels

Farmers in drought-stricken California should take note: In a desert in Australia is a farm that grows and supplies 15 percent of the country's tomatoes without using soil, fresh water or fossil fuels. The farm uses solar energy to de-salinate sea water and operates greenhouses in order to grow Read More...

Study: U.K. can save $4 billio

Study: U.K. can save $4 billion in health care cost every year by giving up coal

There are many hidden costs to human health and the natural environment related to the use of fossil fuels. That’s why renewable energy advocates have long argued that fossil fuels are not cheaper than clean energy. Now that solar and wind energy are beginning to beat oil, gas, and coal, more Read More...