A new NASA tool predicts how high seas will rise in your city if these glaciers melt
Glaciers in Greenland are melting at an increasingly rapid pace, partially due to rising global temperatures caused by human activity.
Leanna is an innovation reporter at Tech Insider, covering stories about the future of food and cities.
Glaciers in Greenland are melting at an increasingly rapid pace, partially due to rising global temperatures caused by human activity.
When residents of the International Business District (IBD) in Songdo, South Korea go to work, pick up their kids from school, or shop for groceries, driving is optional.
An apartment, retail, and office complex with an abundance of greenery is going up in Cairo, Egypt.
In 2017, being a "smart city" isn't just about having fast internet.
In 2017, being a "smart city" isn't just about having fast internet.
Construction on a greenery-covered tower, designed by the Italian firm Stefano Boeri Architetti, will soon start in the Parisian suburb of Villiers-sur-Marne.
Texting is killing us.
Rising sea levels, coastal flooding, and biodiversity loss are stark realities for many cities across the United States.
On a tendance à croire que les pires effets du changement climatiques surviendront dans le futur, mais en fait la Terre en est déjà victime.
Antarctica's nonstop winters make it impossible to grow food outdoors. Fruits and vegetables are instead shipped long distances from overseas, just a few times per year.
Average temperatures have risen in every US state since the early 1900s, causing extreme summers, longer wildfire and allergy seasons, declines in crop and livestock production, and the s...
No one knows for sure what the next decade, century, or millennium will look like.
In 2013, Elon Musk, the famed entrepreneur and CEO of Tesla and Space X, came up with an idea for a vacuum-and-maglev-powered super-fast train that would travel through a tube. It would b...
El mundo se urbaniza a gran velocidad. La ONU pronostica que el número de personas que viven en ciudades podría duplicarse para el año 2050, llegando a 6,5 mil millones.
Un planeta devastado por el cambio climático puede parecer un futuro lejano. Pero la Tierra ya está experimentando los efectos hoy.