PBS高端访谈:复活节岛旅游业带来的困惑
JUDY WOODRUFF: Next, we conclude our series on the growing plastic problem. It is now considered one of the largest environmental threats to both humans and animals. Jeffrey Brown takes us to a tiny island in the South Pacific that is increasingly de
PBS高端访谈:古代遗址和油气管道的争夺
HARI SREENIVASAN: Off the coast of northern Israel, archaeologists have found ancient relics in the seabed where a gas pipeline is being built. But tapping into the undersea natural gas field known as leviathan is not without controversy. Environment
PBS高端访谈:美国掀起跑步捡垃圾运动
JOHN YANG: Plastic bags, cups and other and trash are filling landfills around the world, but a lot of waste doesn't even make it to garbage bins. In the latest installment in our series The Plastic Problem, the NewsHour's Julia Griffin explains how
PBS高端访谈:探究苏格兰的可持续能源发展
HARI SREENIVASAN: There has recently been a steady drumbeat of reports from climate scientists warning that there is less and less time for us to take collective action to slow the disastrous effects of climate change. The United States has withdrawn
PBS高端访谈:废弃的圣诞树怎么处理
Judy Woodruff: And now to our NewsHour Shares, something that caught our eye that might be of interest to you, too. With Christmas season over, one question that gets raised almost every year is what to do with all those trees. As Brian Sullivan of P
PBS高端访谈:缅因州神奇的冰湖
And, finally, a very different story about ice. A small community outside Portland, Maine, got a lot of attention this week for a particularly frosty and rare natural phenomenon. The NewsHour's Julia Griffin, with the help of Maine Public Television,
PBS高端访谈:我们拿亚洲鲤鱼怎么办
HARI SREENIVASAN: As we reported earlier this month, Asian carp, the fast-growing invasive species in lakes and rivers throughout the Mississippi basin, have become a major issue in the Midwest and officials are spending hundreds of millions of dolla
PBS高端访谈:请不要浪费粮食
JUDY WOODRUFF: Believe it or not, Americans altogether throw away about 150,000 tons of food every day. That is about one pound of food per person. It is a staggering figure, considering nearly 13 percent of this country's population experiences food
PBS高端访谈:又到了整理橱柜的时间了
JUDY WOODRUFF: Spring is around the corner, which, for some, means it's time to clean out the closets. As the NewsHour's Rhana Natour explains, a popular Netflix show featuring Japanese organizing expert Marie Kondo encourages people to discard items
PBS高端访谈:电影与气候科学的关系
Hari Sreenivasan: What's a subject scientists can analyze when they watch the Oscars tonight? If You guessed climate change you'll want to hear from our guest Kate Marvel an associate research scientist at Columbia University and a co-host of a very
PBS高端访谈:美国中西部迎来特大洪水
Across the U.S. Midwest, heavy rain and snowmelt have sent rivers over levees, submerging farms and whole neighborhoods in several states. William Brangham has our report. WILLIAM BRANGHAM: In Peru, Nebraska, National Guard trucks bring a lifeline, b
PBS高端访谈:激发人们对海洋的热爱
JUDY WOODRUFF: Marine biologist Sylvia Earle has spent more than four decades at the forefront of ocean exploration. And, at 83, she shows no signs of slowing down. Earle was the first female chief scientist of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospher
PBS高端访谈:极为拥挤的珠穆朗玛峰
JUDY WOODRUFF: Mount Everest remains the ultimate achievement for many mountain climbers. And the number of people who try it just keeps growing, far above the levels of even two decades ago. May is the month when many try to reach the summit. But, a
PBS高端访谈:用照片讲述无情大火
JUDY WOODRUFF: It is said that a picture can speak 1,000 words. Photojournalist Marcus Yam looks for images to tell the tale of heart-wrenching moments. Here is his Brief But Spectacular take on what we learn from what we see. MARCUS YAM, Photographe
PBS高端访谈:零消耗实验室
JUDY WOODRUFF: To heat and cool buildings takes up an astonishing 40 percent of energy used across the world. It's a figure that grows only more troubling as climate change continues to threaten the planet. There is an architect who is trying to chan