environmentIdeasMidwives Are an Overlooked Climate SolutionBy Sarah SloatScienceThis Plastic Packaging Alternative Can Compost in a YearBy Matt BurgessIdeasThe Infinite Cloud Is a FantasyBy Steven Gonzalez Monserrate ScienceEurope’s Cities Are Getting More Crowded—That’s a Good ThingBy Matt ReynoldsScienceNo, Qatar’s World Cup Can’t Be Classed as Carbon-NeutralBy William RalstonScienceThe Great Truffle Shortage Is ComingBy Chris BaraniukScienceEuropeans Are Burning Trees to Keep WarmBy Matt ReynoldsScienceNew Mexico’s Beloved Pinyon Jay Is Losing Its Pine HabitatBy Sara Van NoteScienceThis Platform Makes Sure Companies Stick to Their Climate PledgesBy Sabrina WeissBusinessMathieu Flamini Has a Plan to Decarbonize the Chemical IndustryBy Amit KatwalaScienceThe World Is Drowning in Plastic. Here’s How It All StartedBy Matt SimonScienceThawing Permafrost Exposes Old Pathogens—and New HostsBy Grace BrowneScienceWhere Did Omicron Come From? Maybe Its First Host Was MiceBy Maryn McKennaScienceAfter the Flood, the Flesh-Eating BacteriaBy Meghan HerbstScienceThe World Needs More Gigantic Sci-Fi Sea DamsBy Sabrina WeissScienceSustainable Farming Has an Unlikely Ally: SatellitesBy Ben JamesBusinessWhat the Soup-Throwing Climate Activists Got RightBy Kate KnibbsScienceWar Is an Ecological Disaster—but Ukraine Can Build Back GreenerBy Matt Simon and Gregory BarberScienceWhy Delhi Is Teeming With MosquitoesBy Monika MondalScienceA Teen’s Quest for Better Climate EducationBy Megan ClementScienceGas Drilling Is Disrupting Animal MigrationBy Gregory BarberScienceWildfire Smoke May Carry Deadly Fungi Long DistancesBy Maryn McKennaCultureIs ‘Green Capitalism’ Total BS?By Kate KnibbsWired InsiderMore Than 80 Percent of the World’s Oceans Remain Unexplored. These Scientists are Changing That.More Stories