
Finn Heartley
Articles
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4 days ago |
realinvestigations.news | Ava Grace |Finn Heartley |S.D. Wells |Lance Johnson
A WHO-backed review found high certainty that cell phone radiation (RF-EMF) causes malignant brain (gliomas) and nerve (schwannomas) tumors in animals, with moderate evidence for liver and adrenal cancers. These findings align with prior U.S. government studies. Despite mounting evidence, global safety standards remain unchanged since the 1990s. The FCC has ignored court orders to update its 1996 exposure limits, and undisclosed U.S. research fuels accusations of negligence.
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6 days ago |
climate.news | Willow Tohi |Ava Grace |S.D. Wells |Finn Heartley
NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) discovered wave-like sediment features resembling Earth’s solifluction lobes, suggesting Mars experienced freeze-thaw cycles in its past. The Martian formations, imaged by HiRISE, mirror patterns in Arctic and mountainous areas on Earth, hinting at historical interactions between liquid water and regolith.
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6 days ago |
climate.news | Willow Tohi |Ava Grace |S.D. Wells |Finn Heartley
Google is investing in nuclear energy to power its AI operations, partnering with Kairos Power (molten salt reactors by 2030) and Elementl Power (three potential 600MW fission reactor sites). However, details on reactor designs and locations remain unclear, and regulatory hurdles could delay timelines. Google’s 2024 emissions rose 13% year-over-year, driven by AI data centers.
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6 days ago |
climate.news | Willow Tohi |Ava Grace |S.D. Wells |Finn Heartley
U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum warns that America could face catastrophic blackouts like Spain’s due to overreliance on intermittent renewables and policies sidelining stable energy sources (coal, nuclear). Spain’s April 2024 grid failure, triggered by rapid renewable adoption and coal/nuclear plant closures, caused widespread chaos (stranded commuters, halted flights) and €1.5 billion in losses — highlighting the instability of solar/wind dependence.
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1 week ago |
climate.news | Ava Grace |Willow Tohi |S.D. Wells |Finn Heartley
Major U.S. cities like New York, Houston, and Chicago are sinking up to 20 inches per year due to groundwater extraction, urban sprawl, and drilling. A study in Nature Cities found 28 U.S. cities are sinking, with Houston experiencing the fastest rates, while parts of Mexico City collapse at 20 inches annually. Groundwater depletion causes 80% of urban subsidence, threatening infrastructure like roads, bridges, and buildings with long-term damage.
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