by David Brooks | Nov 5, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
A long-running study at Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest – where long-running studies are the norm – found that the population of beetles fell an incredible 83% between mid 1970s and mid 2010s. The most likely cause? Less snow. The finding indicates...
by David Brooks | Nov 4, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
Researchers with the NH Agricultural Experiment Station at the University of New Hampshire have received a National Science Foundation Award to better understand how forests and other vegetation control nitrogen and sequester carbon in watersheds and how this dynamic...
by David Brooks | Oct 31, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
New Hampshire’s solar commercial rebate program is being shut to new applications, due to a lack of funds, due mostly to a little-known energy supplier in New Hampshire with some very big contracts that went bankruptcy. Bob Sanders of NH Business Review has the...
by David Brooks | Oct 31, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
“Despite setbacks and delays, the UMaine project is likely to be the first floating commercial-scale wind farm in the U.S.” says Portland Press-Herald’s Tux Turkel, probably the most experienced energy reporter still writing for a New England...
by David Brooks | Oct 30, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
If you missed the Science Cafe in Concord about linguistics, you can watch it online at YouTube, right here.
by David Brooks | Oct 30, 2019 | Blog, Newsletter
Whether it’s good or bad to burn wood to create heat and/or electricity is a contentious topic that has been featured here more than once. It has risen to the fore again in New Hampshire because of the shutdown of some biomass electricity plants up north as part...