Skip to main content

Your web browser is out of date. Please update it for greater security, speed and the best experience on this site.

Choose a different browser

News

  • Cutting food waste helps improve your ‘foodprint’

    Around a third of the resources used to produce the US’s food are wasted through food loss and waste (FLW), a new study has revealed. The research from the University of Texas at Austin and Sustainable America, published today in the journal Environmental Research Letters, examined the environmental impacts of the average American’s diet and […]

  • Sustainable irrigation may harm other development goals, study shows

    Pursuing sustainable irrigation, without significant irrigation efficiency gains, could negatively impact environmental and development goals in many areas of the world, a new study has found. Over-extraction of groundwater for crop irrigation is one of the main causes of groundwater depletion in regions including Mexico, North East China, northern Africa, the Middle East, and the […]

  • US stands to save billions through renewable energy usage

    Rolling out and extending existing US renewable energy standards nationwide could save hundreds of billions of dollars in health and environmental costs by 2050, a new study has found. The researchers from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, California, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Colorado, found that the air quality and climate change mitigation benefits […]

  • Cost-effective quantum moves a step closer

    Canadian and US researchers have taken an important step towards enabling quantum networks to be cost-effective and truly secure from attack. The experiments, by the team from the University of Calgary, the California Institute of Technology and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Colorado, prove the viability of a measurement-device-independent quantum key distribution (QKD) […]

  • US public backs carbon tax, and spending revenue on renewables

    The majority of the US public is in favour of a tax on fossil fuels, provided the money goes into clean energy and infrastructure, according to a new study. The Yale University study surveyed Americans’ willingness to pay a carbon tax, and their preferences on how any revenue should be spent. The results were published […]

  • Celebrate the end of Saturn mission with a free ebook - The Ringed Planet

    Today, Nasa’s Cassini spacecraft will point itself toward the surface of Saturn, and end with a crash its 13-year mission delving into the mysteries of the ringed planet’s system. Cassini’s instruments have revealed new details including the only extra-terrestrial lakes known in the solar system, and its final series of orbits will reveal details of […]

  • Answer to bacterial antibiotic resistance may be found in plants

    Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is an ever-growing problem for healthcare, agriculture and hygiene, thanks to their indiscriminate and often excessive use. While natural, plant-derived antimicrobial small molecules may offer a potential solution, they often lack sufficient activity and selectivity to fulfil antibiotic requirements, and their conventional methods activation may not be compatible with biomedical applications. […]

  • We're celebrating Peer Review Week 2017

    Embracing this year’s Peer Review Week theme of transparency, we start with IOP Publishing staff revealing their roles in the peer review process: https://youtu.be/fNRTBXH3JwEVideo can’t be loaded because JavaScript is disabled: Peer Review Week 2017 (https://youtu.be/fNRTBXH3JwE) Find out more about how we’re celebrating Peer Review Week 2017 at IOP Publishing here.