Science Archive - Page 6
Category main136 stories in science category.
Science | Europe
Packaged Food Is About to Get Radically Different in Europe. Here Is the Timeline
New EU packaging rules are entering implementation. Here is exactly what changes for consumers, when, and what the European food and packaging industry is scrambling to deliver.
Science | Europe
Snow Geese and the Arctic: Nature's Most Spectacular Migration Is Happening Right Now
Tens of millions of snow geese are currently making their annual migration to the Arctic. Here is why this natural spectacle matters scientifically and why climate change is starting to alter it.
Science | Europe
The Fluorinated Greenhouse Gas Committee Nobody Knows About That Is Banning Your Air Conditioning Fluid
The EU's committee on fluorinated greenhouse gases met in April 2026. Here is what they are regulating, why it matters for your cooling equipment, and who is affected.
Science | Europe
The EU Packaging Regulation That Will Change How Everything You Buy Is Wrapped
New EU guidance on packaging rules has been published. Here is what changes, when the changes affect consumers, and which industries are most impacted.
Science | Europe
What 'Europeans Rush to Buy Solar and Heat Pumps' Actually Tells Us About the Green Transition's Real Driver
Policy couldn't accelerate the green transition as fast as energy bills have. Here is what the spring 2026 demand surge for green technology tells us about human behaviour and policy design.
Science | Europe
The Scientists Tracking How the Iran War Is Affecting the World's Climate Research
The Iran conflict has disrupted climate monitoring stations, diverted funding from climate research, and complicated international scientific cooperation in ways that have real consequences.
Science | Europe
The Mediterranean Diet Is Going to Survive the Oil Crisis — Here Is the Delicious Evidence
Olive oil prices are at record highs. But research shows Mediterranean diet adherence has cultural resilience that simple price analysis misses. Here is the counterintuitive evidence.
Science | Europe
The Volcano Under Naples Has Been Rumbling for Three Months and Nobody Seems Alarmed
Italy's Campi Flegrei supervolcano has been experiencing elevated seismic activity for three months. Here is what scientists say is happening and what the actual risk level is.
Science | Europe
The Carbon Market Europe Created to Fight Climate Change Is Being Gamed — Here's How
The EU Emissions Trading System was designed to put a price on carbon pollution. Here is how large companies are gaming the system in ways that reduce its effectiveness without violating its rules.
Science | Europe
The Amazon Is Burning Again — and the EU-Mercosur Deal Is About to Make It Worse
Early dry season fires are already appearing in the Amazon as the EU-Mercosur trade deal enters force. Environmental groups say the deal will accelerate what they call the 'chain saw clause.'
Science | Europe
The EU's Food Fraud Crackdown Just Got Its Most Powerful Weapon Yet
Europe's food fraud problem costs billions annually. A new AI-powered detection system just went live. Here is how it works and what it means for the olive oil, honey, and wine you're buying.
Science | Europe
Europe's Water Is Poisoned, Running Out, and Nobody in Power Wants to Talk About It Honestly
A landmark Euronews investigation reveals the scale of Europe's drinking water crisis: PFAS chemicals, nitrates, microplastics, and drought are destroying the continent's most basic resource.
Science | Europe
The Algorithm That Is Making PTSD Treatment Work for Veterans
An AI-assisted PTSD treatment programme developed in the Netherlands is producing better outcomes than conventional therapy for military veterans. Here is how it works.
Science | Europe
The Climate Models That Now Predict Individual Weather Events — and Why It Changes Everything
A new generation of climate models can now attribute specific weather events to climate change with unprecedented precision. Here is what this means for insurance, law, and policy.
Science | Europe
The Climate Lawsuit That Could Force Europe's Biggest Companies to Change Everything
A landmark climate lawsuit against a major European energy company is working its way through Dutch courts. Here is what it could mean for corporate climate responsibility across Europe.
Science | Europe
The Science Behind Why Oil Prices Can't Come Down Quickly Even If Hormuz Reopens
Even if the Strait of Hormuz opens tomorrow, oil prices won't fall back to pre-war levels for months. Here is the science and economics of why energy markets don't reverse quickly.