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environmental impact

Trouble for clownfishes

October 27, 2025 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Warming ocean temperatures threaten the future of clownfishes

Clownfishes or anemonefishes are colorful saltwater fishes that mainly inhabit coral reefs in the warm and tropical waters of the Indo-Pacific.  Clownfishes have a symbiotic and mutually beneficial relationship with sea anemones, which they rely on for shelter and protection from predators. In turn, clownfishes will protect the anemone from anemone-eating fish, as well as clean and fan them.  The popular film Finding Nemo is about a clownfish who lives in a secluded sea anemone.

The Red Sea, circled by Middle Eastern deserts, is home to marine life that is accustomed to very warm water – often 85 to 90 degrees during the summer.  However, in the past three years marine heat waves have made the Red Sea even hotter.  The rising sea temperatures have caused a breakdown in the symbiotic relationship between clownfish and anemones.

Anemones have a symbiotic relationship of their own with the same microscopic algae that pair with coral.   Just as is the case with coral, anemones expel the algae from their tissues during periods of high heat, causing them to bleach.  Prolonged bleaching can result in the death of the anemone and, in turn, exposes the clownfish to danger.

Researchers from Boston University monitoring three Red Sea reefs over a three-year period found that the marine heatwave in 2023 resulted in the death of 94 to 100% of the clownfish and 66-94% of the anemones.  Rising ocean temperatures can be devastating for many sea creatures.

Anemones are not as well-studied as coral, so it is not clear whether their populations can recover, particularly once the clownfish are gone, making them much more vulnerable to their own predators.

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Clownfish and Anemones Are Disappearing Because of Climate Change

Photo, posted March 9, 2016, courtesy of John Voo via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

AI and the appetite for natural gas

October 20, 2025 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Natural gas capacity growing as AI and data centers expand

A recent survey of the plans of U.S. electricity utilities for meeting projected future demand indicates that they are looking to build twice as much natural gas capacity as they had anticipated just 18 months earlier.  The reason?  Data centers.  These warehouses full of computers that form the backbone of the internet are multiplying rapidly as companies are adding power-hungry servers for artificial intelligence. 

Data centers used less than 2% of U.S. electricity prior to 2018.  They consumed 4.4% in 2023.  By 2028, they are projected to use anywhere between 6.7 and 12%.  While overall electricity demand had been relatively flat for the past 20 years, now the power grid is scrambling to keep up.

The long-term plans of utilities have been favoring renewables for a while.  Previous industry-wide projections had 258 gigawatts of new wind and solar versus 102 gigawatts of new natural gas plants through 2035.  These plans showed that wind and solar could overtake natural gas as the country’s largest source of electricity by that year.  But newer plans adding additional generating capacity have mostly added new gas and very little renewables.

Utilities are leaning heavily on natural gas in part due to the inertia of regulatory actions that define the rate-setting process.  The grid is simply not set up to adapt to new technology and to deal with the unprecedented changes that data centers bring about.

Ultimately, the continuing reliance on natural gas will be an unfortunate burden on the consumer and on the environment.

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Riding the High From Data Centers, the Grid Cannot Kick Its Gas Habit

Photo, posted January 23, 2023, courtesy of Aileen Devlin / Jefferson Lab via Flickr.

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Better Zinc Batteries | Earth Wise

May 17, 2023 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

The rapid growth of wind and solar power continues to drive a global quest for new battery technologies that can be used to store the energy generated by these sources when the sun isn’t shining, and the wind isn’t blowing.

For the most part, current battery energy storage systems use lithium-ion batteries – the same sort of batteries found in cellphones and electric vehicles.  There are many other battery chemistries, but they mostly have shortcomings in performance, economy, or longevity. 

Batteries store electricity in the form of chemical energy and chemical reactions convert that energy into electrical energy. Every battery has two electrodes:  the anode, from which electrons flow into external circuits, and the cathode, which receives electrons from the external circuit.  The electrolyte is the chemical medium through which the electrons flow.

One technology that has great potential is zinc-based batteries.  Zinc itself is a metal that is safe and abundant.  Batteries based on it are energy dense. However, zinc batteries have faced the challenge of having a short cycle life.  The batteries end up plating zinc on their anodes and battery performance degrades. 

A team of researchers at Oregon State University and three other universities have recently developed a new electrolyte for zinc batteries that raises the efficiency of the zinc metal anode to nearly 100% – actually slightly better than lithium-ion batteries.

Zinc batteries have a number of potential advantages over lithium-ion.  The new hybrid electrolyte developed by the researchers is non-flammable, cost-effective, and has low environmental impact.  Lithium-ion batteries rely on the supplies of relatively rare metals that are often difficult and environmentally harmful to obtain. 

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Researchers develop electrolyte enabling high efficiency of safe, sustainable zinc batteries

Photo, posted May 13, 2017, courtesy of Jeanne Menjoulet via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

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