Duke University students dig deep into their research on geothermal energy
Geothermal energy is the clean and renewable source of heat contained in rock beneath the earth’s surface. And Duke students can study this on campus.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Dec 18, 2022
Geothermal energy is the clean and renewable source of heat contained in rock beneath the earth’s surface. And Duke students can study this on campus.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Dec 17, 2022
Researchers at NC State have developed and demonstrated a robot capable of sorting, manipulating, and identifying microscopic marine fossils.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Apr 22, 2022
A local startup is challenging people to take action to combat climate change. And, Green Places to Work recently added to a prior fundraising round.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Jan 4, 2022
A Durham startup founded in 2017 has been acquired by S&P Global.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Nov 9, 2021
An economist at RTI International writes that North Carolina’s economy is likely to face a steadily growing drain on productivity – and recurrent asset losses – , without more progress to stem climate change.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Jun 25, 2021
RTI International is reorganizing, adding a new technical business unit that will be known as Sustainable Growth & Resilience, focusing on the multifactorial challenges contributing to climate change.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Apr 23, 2021
Investors who back upstart companies are known for their optimism. But when it comes to the wall of money pouring into clean energy, their enthusiasm is tinged with concern.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Apr 23, 2021
John Kerry, special envoy for climate, called Tesla stock rise a market signal that climate will matter to investors, consumers, moving forward.
Read MorePosted by Jason Parker | Apr 21, 2021
SAS will partner with two organizations leading efforts to curb climate change, and is in the process of implementing new tactics to meet its target of becoming net-zero by 2050.
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