Today’s Solutions: May 08, 2026

The new peace in Colombia was

The new peace in Colombia was led and made by women

After a 50-plus-year guerilla war and 180,000 civilian deaths, Colombia is entering a new era of peace. The deal between the government and the FARC guerilla group is also unique because women were fully part of the process. A 2012 United Nations analysis of 31 peace processes between 1992 and Read More...

How to recognize and beat burn

How to recognize and beat burnout

Employee burnout is all too common in the U.S. In fact, around 62% of employees are said to be stressed and go through burnout at some stage. Burnout is where you mentally or physically collapse due to work related issues, and it can have serious repercussions on your personal and professional Read More...

It’s not just solar panels.

It’s not just solar panels. Electric cars can be contagious, too.

We already know that solar power can be contagious. Studies have found that if you install a rooftop solar system, it increases the odds that your neighbors will too. Now along comes tantalizing evidence that electric vehicles have a similar dynamic. When charging stations are more visible, people Read More...

Fitbit’s charge and flex

Fitbit's charge and flex fitness trackers just got a lot better

Last Thursday, former volleyball star Gabby Reece worked out with a bunch of tech journalists on a rooftop in downtown San Francisco. I only made it through half of the 20-minute workout, which says something about my personal fitness level or the workout's difficulty, perhaps both. The event was Read More...

Colombian women made sure gend

Colombian women made sure gender equality was at the center of a groundbreaking peace deal with the FARC

The Colombian government and the FARC, the country’s largest guerrilla group, signed a peace agreement to end their 50-plus-year war last week. The deal settles the main issues over which the two parties had been killing themselves and some 180,000 civilians (link in Spanish) over the course Read More...

A chocolate pill? Scientists t

A chocolate pill? Scientists to test whether cocoa extract boosts health

You've likely heard that dark chocolate is good for you. Last year, researchers linked a regular chocolate habit to a reduced risk of heart disease. And, as we've reported, compounds found in cocoa known as flavanols or polyphenols have been shown to improve vascular health by increasing blood Read More...

Millions of used electric car

Millions of used electric car batteries will help store energy for the grid. Maybe.

Once or twice a year, Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF) founder Michael Liebreich posts a magisterial summation of some trend or set of trends in the energy world. His latest report is about electric vehicles. It’s worth reading the whole thing, but it was an aside about discarded EV Read More...

New solar powered device reviv

New solar powered device revives hydrogen economy dream

Despite a plethora of naysayers, research is progressing apace on deploying hydrogen as a sustainable fuel that also doubles as an energy storage opportunity. The latest development illustrates just how quickly that pace is accelerating. A research team based at Switzerland’s Ecole Read More...

GM churns 2 million water bott

GM churns 2 million water bottles into fleece

General Motors (GM) long claimed to be an industry leader in recycling. It describes its zero-waste agenda as encompassing a variety of programs, from reusing spent Chevy Volt batteries at a data center to converting used battery cases into duck houses for wildlife habitats. In recent years, the Read More...

See inside this vertical farm

See inside this vertical farm where 65,000 pounds of lettuce grow each year in shipping containers

Los Angeles-based Local Roots' three farms are no ordinary farms. They're not even outside — but inside three small shipping containers. The startup uses vertical hydroponic farming, a method where plants grow year-round with LEDs rather than natural sunlight. Read More...