Today’s Solutions: December 25, 2025

Total number of posts: 23558

Eat your vegetables! gets fun

Eat your vegetables! gets fun

Children often need time and repeated attempts in order for them to fall in love with vegetables. How about adding some fun to the experience? Parents of picky eaters and their children may both enjoy this interactive tool to explore their relationship with each kind of vegetable. Children can give Read More...

What can we learn from the wor

What can we learn from the world’s happiest countries?

The third World Happiness Report was released yesterday by the Sustainable Development Solutions Network for the United Nations. New Zealand is the only newcomer in the top 10 happiest countries, joining Canada and Australia as the only non-European contestants in this lucky cluster. What they Read More...

School children to stand at th

School children to stand at their desks for increased health and focus

America’s sedentary lifestyle is linked to a host of public health issues, including obesity. Schoolchildren are no exception, who spend an estimated 90% of their waking hours sitting down. A California couple started a health revolution by replacing traditional classroom furniture with standing Read More...

Audi captures CO2 from the air

Audi captures CO2 from the air to produce green diesel

While renewables are beginning to make a dent into the carbon intensity of the power sector thanks to the plummeting price of technology, the automobile industry has been exploring green fuels so as to lower its dependency on fossil fuels. Audi has been pushing the envelope, exploring ways to Read More...

Cyclists in NYC have tripled o

Cyclists in NYC have tripled over the past 10 years

Is the Big Apple on its way to becoming even more delicious, as in more livable and less polluted? The latest numbers released by the NYC Department of Transportation tells a most encouraging story: cyclists are taking over the streets (relatively speaking.) Already, expectations are high that the Read More...

The Urban Homesteader, a TV se

The Urban Homesteader, a TV series to share tips for sustainable living

Urban homesteading is not just a hipster’s dream. It is a lifestyle designed around a thoughtful approach to sustainability in an urban environment. Growing food is one aspect, but they are many more issues to consider about sustainable living than sourcing food. The PBS media professionals who Read More...

Seed bank devoted to cultivate

Seed bank devoted to cultivated biodiversity in dry areas saved from destruction in Syria

Wars destroy lives, communities, cultural artifacts, historical heritage and biodiversity. For the second time in less than a century, individuals committed to preserving cultivated biodiversity have displayed heroic courage to save a seed bank from the ravages of war. The International Center Read More...

North Korea’s quiet revoluti

North Korea’s quiet revolution is powered by solar panels

A limited power grid and regular blackouts are a way of life in North Korea. Including in winter when freezing temperatures reduces hydropower capacity. Over the past year, foreign observers have been noticing an unusual sight on a growing number of residential buildings in the capital Pyongyang Read More...

Cuba’s artists soon to get t

Cuba’s artists soon to get their place in the sun

Cuba has been teeming with artists since its cash-starved government encouraged art in the late 1980s as a way to bring in foreign currency. The 53-year-long US trade embargo on Cuba has done little to promote strong relationships between the American and the Cuban art communities and markets. And Read More...

Regular physical exercise show

Regular physical exercise shown to help prevent dementia

Dementia affects one in six people over the age of 80. Five key evidence-based prevention strategies are moderate physical exercise, brain exercise, not smoking, a healthy diet and looking after your heart. Those are derived from the converging findings of several long-term studies. And it seems Read More...