Warp Curated News

Warp Curated News

Warp Curated News 1 min read

Danish people donate nearly $3 million in first-ever climate telethon

Fighting climate change from the comfort of your sofa is something hard to conceive, but that’s exactly what Danish people were able to do this weekend through the help of a TV fundraiser. Individuals and companies alike in Denmark donated about $2.7 million to plant almost 1 million

Warp Curated News 1 min read

Drinking tea regularly may help your brain stay sharp

Tea has long been touted for its wide array of health benefits, including mood improvement and cardiovascular disease prevention. But finding substantial evidence to back up these claims is more challenging, especially when searching for tea’s benefits on brain health. Now, thanks to scientists from the National University of

Warp Curated News 1 min read

3 ways one business coalition is combating modern slavery

One of the harsh realities of business in the 21st century is that it’s still upheld by slavery. Shocking as it might seem, over 40.3 million people [https://www.ilo.org/global/topics/forced-labour/statistics/lang--en/index.htm] globally are victims of modern slavery today, and at least

Warp Curated News 1 min read

This device generates renewable electricity from the cold dark air

While solar cells are an efficient source of renewable energy during the day, currently there is no similar renewable approach to generating power at night. Solar lights can be outfitted with batteries to store energy produced in daylight hours for night-time use, but the addition drives up costs. With that

Warp Curated News 1 min read

All about spiders and their silk, one of the most versatile substances on earth

In the latest issue of National Geographic, environmental writer Jason Bittel spins a wonderful article exploring spiderwebs, spiders, and all things arachnid.   The intricate webs they build are items of wonder and beauty, but by using this wonderful silky, sticky, sometimes stinky substance, which is actually a protein created in

Warp Curated News 1 min read

How fast fashion hurts the planet, and what you can do about it

If we could trace the ecological and social impact of our clothes, most of us would stop shopping altogether. The global fashion industry, specifically high volume producers of low-quality garments, such as Forever 21, H&M, Fashion Nova, and Zara, employ workers at sub-poverty wages. The pollution from their

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More legal rights could mean less deadly algae for Lake Erie

Laws focused on natural spaces often hone in on protecting what humans can gain from the natural resource, rather than protecting the space itself. However, “Rights of Nature” laws, which give natural spaces protection as legal entities, are beginning to crop up in an effort to change the narrative from

Warp Curated News 1 min read

Plastic waste could soon be used to pave the roads you drive on

Last year China stopped [https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/11/world/china-recyclables-ban.html] accepting much of the world’s recyclable waste. Since then, many countries have been faced with the challenge of how to deal with their own trash. In Australia, however, recycling company Close the Loop has figured

Warp Curated News 1 min read

Connecting over light waves? How LiFi will change communications

In today’s connected world, wireless data has become a critical utility: an invisible element of our modern infrastructure that increasingly underpins many of the services upon which we rely. But there’s a problem. The radio spectrum upon which much of our connectivity depends is getting crowded. Against this