Heat pumps are electric appliances that can both heat and cool your home. Scientists see them as a climate solution because ...
Nearly 52,000 people will travel in and out of the Manchester-Boston Regional Airport during the two weeks surrounding ...
A judge has allowed a 2021 lawsuit filed by the state of Vermont against major fossil fuel companies to move forward.
Birds in Connecticut are at risk from the use of a common class of insecticide, according to the Connecticut Audubon Society’s annual “State of the Birds” report. The group said neonicotinoids, or ...
As Sununu enters the final days of his four-term tenure, he leaves a legacy as a governor more successful at appealing to the ...
NPR visits a secret drone command center near the front lines in eastern Ukraine, where crews are using remote-controlled ...
Nearly 40 years after that mission ended in tragedy, Bleier – herself a Concord High social studies teacher – pressed play ...
A holiday meal without mashed potatoes is like Santa Clause without a beard. It's obvious something's missing. "Potatoes, in ...
Whether we were paying attention or not, 2024 was filled with good news. In case you weren't, NPR's member stations have been ...
It's looking like 2024 will be the hottest year since record-keeping began, unseating 2023 for the top spot. Climate change ...
It's often said that December for film critics is like tax season for accountants. This is our crunch time, when we attempt to take stock of the past 12 months' worth of movies and determine our ...
2023 was a chart-topper. A surge in global temperatures made it the hottest year since record-keeping began in the mid-1800s, producing heat that one scientist called "gobsmackingly bananas.