The oil refiner is accused of illegally discharging hundreds of thousands of gallons of industrial waste during the pandemic.
The Bajau Laut have traditionally lived semi-nomadic lives on the ocean, but climate change and overfishing are driving them onto land, making them increasingly vulnerable to environmental changes.
The oil refiner is accused of illegally discharging hundreds of thousands of gallons of industrial waste during the pandemic.
Plankton, the key ingredients of the primordial ocean soup that allowed all life to flourish, are central to a new UN ...
EXCLUSIVE - It was believed that Point Nemo, the most remote oceanic spot on the planet has been untouched by humans ...
An important ocean cooling process created by trillions of tiny invertebrates is at risk of being rapidly altered as plastic ...
This is the sixth in a series of opinion pieces from leaders around campus on the role that Michigan Tech innovators will ...
Every hurricane in the Atlantic was made more intense, part of a growing trend for Earth’s most powerful storms, two new ...
Reefs are paying the price for new housing developments — and state marine protection alone can’t stop human waste from ...
While China and the US are the world’s largest plastic producers, as well as the countries with the largest emissions of ...
In the southern Brazilian state of Paraná, the small coastal town of Antonina gets abundant and high-quality water for its ...
On October 30th, 2024, MAS Active, in collaboration with the MAS Foundation for Change, reached a significant milestone in their ongoing environmental efforts with the installation of the 60th Ocean ...