A 4,000-year-old burial site in Sudan contains the first evidence of a mysterious funeral ritual that could rewrite parts of human history ...
Cities shape access to clean water. Compact growth helps millions reach pipes and sewage, while sprawling cities make ...
The relationship between emotions and the economy is real, especially for Latinx college graduates who carry upward of ...
A new study analyzing more than 100 cities across Asia, Africa, and Latin America has quantified the stark consequences of ...
Our world is becoming increasingly urban. Cities are now home to 45 per cent of the global population of 8.2 billion, according to UN DESA’s World Urbanization Prospects 2025: Summary of Results, ...
Oil and gas demand could continue to grow until the middle of the century, according to a new International Energy Agency scenario that shifts away from previous expectations of so-called peak oil ...
Global demand for oil and natural gas could grow until 2050, the International Energy Agency said Wednesday, departing from previous expectations of a speedy transition to cleaner fuels following US ...
LONDON, Oct 16 (Reuters) - Oil, gas and coal will continue to dominate the world’s energy mix well beyond 2050, as soaring electricity demand outpaces the shift to renewables, according to a new ...
Robert Peters is a Senior Research Fellow for Strategic Deterrence in Heritage’s Allison Center for National Security. The global security environment is deteriorating as America’s adversaries are ...
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POV: School in 2050

Step into the future with "POV: School in 2050"! In this fascinating glimpse into the educational world of tomorrow, explore how technology has revolutionized learning environments. Experience a day ...
A Nuvama Institutional Equities report forecasts natural gas as the only fossil fuel to see increased use in the US, China, and India by 2050, even as coal and oil decline globally. While renewables ...
UC Santa Barbara researchers project that human impacts on oceans will double by 2050, with warming seas and fisheries collapse leading the charge. The tropics and poles face the fastest changes, and ...