But for parents like Arnold, Brown and others who already lost their children to overdoses, it is too late.
Money has already poured into different strategies on land — among them, pumping, developing sites to
, which naturally store CO2. But many of those projects are limited by space and could impact nearby communities. The ocean already regulates Earth’s climate by absorbing heat and carbon, and by comparison, it seems limitless.“Is that huge surface area an option to help us deal with and mitigate the worst effects of climate change?” asked Adam Subhas, who is leading a carbon removal project with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, based on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.Adam Subhas, right, a scientist with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, speaks about an ocean carbon project at the Massachusetts Lobstermen’s Association Annual Weekend and Trade Show, Friday, Jan. 31, 2025, in Hyannis, Mass. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
Adam Subhas, right, a scientist with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, speaks about an ocean carbon project at the Massachusetts Lobstermen’s Association Annual Weekend and Trade Show, Friday, Jan. 31, 2025, in Hyannis, Mass. (AP Photo/David Goldman)On a Tuesday afternoon along the edge of Halifax Harbour, Burt stashed his bike helmet and donned a hard hat to give two engineering students a tour of Planetary’s site.
A detached truck trailer sat in a clearing, storing massive bags of magnesium oxide mined in Spain and shipped across the Atlantic to Canada.
Most companies looking offshore for climate solutions are trying to reduce or transform the carbon dioxide stored in the ocean. If they can achieve that, Burt said, the oceans will act “like a vacuum” to absorb more gases from the air.for minors in the last five years or so, even as overall drug use has dropped slightly. In a 2022 analysis of fentanyl-laced prescription pills, the
contained a potentially lethal dose of the drug.And social media, where tainted, fake prescription drugs can be obtained with just a few clicks, is a big part of the problem. Experts, law enforcement and children’s advocates say companies like Snap, TikTok, Telegram and Meta Platforms, which owns Instagram, are not doing enough to
The stories of these victims often play out similarly: The kids hear you can get pills on social media. A few taps later and then a package arrives. They retreat to the sanctity of their bedroom and take a pill. Fifteen minutes later, they’re dead. No one even knows until the next morning.Paul DelPonte, executive director and CEO of the National Crime Prevention Council, likened this crisis to a Johnson & Johnson incident in 1982 when seven people died due to