Revolutionary CRISPR-edited wheat triggers soil bacteria to convert atmospheric nitrogen into plant-usable fertilizer, potentially transforming global agriculture by reducing dependence on synthetic fertilizers and their environmental impacts.
Researchers at UBC have developed an AI system that can independently conduct complete scientific research projects, from generating ideas to writing peer-reviewed papers, marking a significant milestone in autonomous scientific discovery.
The Africa Health Research Institute and University of Sussex launch SHIELD—a transdisciplinary hub linking the WEMA and S3E projects—to accelerate climate-health research and safeguard communities worldwide.
A data-driven tour of the policies, technologies, and scientific breakthroughs set to define climate progress in 2025—and what they mean for staying within 1.5 °C.
Florida State University introduces a major funding opportunity supporting faculty-led research on sustainability, climate mitigation, and resilience, with a focus on cross-disciplinary collaboration and external follow-on support.
A new Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism report synthesizes forecasts from 17 media experts worldwide on how artificial intelligence will fundamentally reshape news production, distribution, and consumption by 2026.
Chinese researchers have created an AI model that reconstructs hourly concentrations of sulfate, nitrate, ammonium, organic matter and elemental carbon in PM2.5 using only routine air-quality and meteorological data, achieving correlations above 0.91 and cutting monitoring costs.
The Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Future Earth, The Earth League and the World Climate Research Programme have opened the nomination window for this year’s “10 New Insights in Climate Science” report—an influential synthesis that distills the most policy-relevant breakthroughs from peer-reviewed literature and delivers them directly to UNFCCC negotiators, finance ministries and adaptation planners.
Copyright: © 2026 Tathyashodh . All Rights Reserved.