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Climate change fuels disasters, but deaths don't add up

Catastrophes climatiques : toujours plus fréquentes, pas forcément plus meurtrières.
Article par AFP
Climate scientists say that human-driven global warming is bringing hotter summers, worse droughts, fiercer wildfires and other destructive weather events - Raul BRAVO (AFP)

Mycow Express

Balkan wild rivers in steady decline: study

Les rivières sauvages des Balkans en net recul, selon une étude.
Article par AFP
The Balkans are home to some of Europe's cleanest and wildest rivers - ADNAN BECI (AFP)

Mycow Express

With monitors and lawsuits, Pakistanis fight for clean air

Pollution record au Pakistan : des citoyens s'organisent pour défendre leur droit à un air plus propre.
Article par AFP
Pakistan was classified in 2024 as the third most-polluted country in the world - Asif HASSAN (AFP)

A la une

Plastics everywhere, and the myth that made it possible

Le plastique : comment s'est-il développé et comment s'en débarrasser.
Article par AFP
Author Judith Enck argues it is not too late to reduce the use of plastic, which has surged in the last twenty years - Adnan Beci (AFP)

Podcast

Is it worth taking vitamins? (3min52)

Les vitamines sont-elles vraiment le complément idéal à notre alimentation ?
Article par AFP
Podcast

Mycow Express

Penguins bring forward breeding season as Antarctica warms: study

Le réchauffement de l'Antarctique pousse les manchots à se reproduire de plus en plus tôt.
Article par AFP
Graphic showing eleven of the world's penguin species. - Laurence CHU, John SAEKI (AFP)

A la une

UN report declares global state of 'water bankruptcy'

Selon un rapport de l'ONU, nous rentrons dans "l'ère de la faillite de l'eau".
Article par AFP
The UN says new language is needed to describe the crisis state of the world's water basins and aquifers - Nelson ALMEIDA (AFP)

Podcast

Drumming is good for you (3min45)

Faire de la batterie serait bon pour le cerveau.
Article par Carter
Podcast

Palm trees bloom for the first and last time in Rio de Janeiro

Talipot palm trees are blooming for the first, and last, time in their lives in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The talipot palm, native to southern India and Sri Lanka, is one of the largest palm species on the planet, with some reaching more than 30 metres. The trees, growing in Rio's Aterro do Flamengo park and the Botanical Garden, were planted in the 1960s by the legendary landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx. Now, some six decades later, these giants have reached the peak of their existence. The entire process, from the opening of the first flowers to the ripening of the fruit, will take about a year. Once the fruit falls, the palm trees will slowly begin to die.
Article par AFP
palm trees.png

Mycow Express

Experts growing new skin for Swiss fire victims

Des experts suisses cultivent de la peau pour les victimes de l'incendie de Crans-Montana.
Article par AFP