海角大神

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Drought in Africa, and the innovative response

In this edition: How drought-resistant farming methods have the potential to improve women's lives in Lesotho; lead testing on the rise in schools; digging into data on climate-change 'hiatus.'

By Mark Trumbull, Staff writer

What we're writing

Why drought-resistant farming could be a feminist act in Africa

Often steps that address environmental concerns also bring side benefits. As parts of Africa need food aid amid one of the worst droughts in a century, strides are being made聽toward drought-resistant聽farming. These new聽methods can聽lighten a major聽burden聽for women, carrying water, even as they make聽crops more resilient. // Story and photo, from Lesotho, by聽Ryan Lenora Brown

After Flint, stepped-up water testing at US schools

A number of schools and states have taken fresh steps to test for lead in water at schools. But more action is still needed, experts say. //聽Stacy Teicher Khadaroo

Supposed climate change hiatus: What really happened?

A closer look at a much-discussed (and politically charged) slowdown in temperature rise from 1998 to 2012. Researchers have independently replicated NOAA's recalibration of sea surface data from that period. //聽Eva Botkin-Kowacki

How climate change threatens famed Amalfi Coast

More-intense rains increase mudslide risks in a region known for its steep terrain. Possible responses include preserving lemon groves and testing an early-warning system. //聽Nick Squires

Singapore's bold course toward water self-sufficiency

The island nation has little water of its own but is determined to shed a reliance on water imports. One key is water recycling, alongside desalination and catchment. //聽Tom Benner

What we're reading

What's your climate resolution聽for the new year?

Scientists and others offer聽some perspectives on how they plan to think and act regarding climate change in 2017. // Yale Climate Connections

Storm damage seen falling $8.3 billion a year under聽Louisiana's coastal plan

It's hard to predict these things precisely, but a rewrite of Louisiana's 50-year coastal plan (including聽nurturing wetlands) is geared to save huge sums in potential storm-surge damage.聽// New Orleans Times-Picayune

Greenland melt may threaten聽Atlantic circulation

New research concludes that ocean currents, which distribute nutrients and influence climate, are聽at greater risk than prior estimates have allowed.聽// Hakai Magazine

Tesla's Musk: Renewables not doomed under Trump

It's just one tea leaf, but the electric-car champion has a positive takeaway from talks with聽the president-elect.聽// Elektrek

What's trending

Insurers paid out $50 billion for natural disasters in 2016

"There are now many indications that certain events 鈥 such as persistent weather systems or storms bringing torrential rain and hail 鈥 are more likely to occur in certain regions as a result of climate change."聽// Peter Hoeppe聽of reinsurance firm Munich Re, quoted by Reuters

Can carbon-capture technology prosper under Trump?

"What I saw with the president-elect was a laserlike focus on jobs.... I think he was intrigued鈥 that carbon capture might save coal jobs.聽// Sen. Heidi Heitkamp (D) of North Dakota, quoted by The New York Times