It’s raining plastic. On March 23, 2026, researchers confirmed that forests trap more airborne microplastics than cities. At micro2media.com, we explore the “comb-out effect” and how the new EU “Shedding Tax” aims to clean the very air we breathe.

It’s raining plastic. On March 23, 2026, researchers confirmed that forests trap more airborne microplastics than cities. At micro2media.com, we explore the “comb-out effect” and how the new EU “Shedding Tax” aims to clean the very air we breathe.

As the world watches, China has transformed from a coal giant into a green hydrogen powerhouse, shattering production records and building the world’s longest “molecule highways.” This journalistic deep dive explores the human, technical, and ecological stakes of the most ambitious energy pivot in history.

As 2025 cements its place as one of the hottest years in recorded history, the global community stands at a crossroads. From record-shattering ocean temperatures to the rapid escalation of green technology, this article explores the definitive climate facts of 2025 and the urgent path toward a sustainable future.

AI’s massive energy use has branded it a climate villain, but it holds the key to solving renewable energy’s biggest problem: intermittency. By mastering grid prediction and storage optimization, AI is transforming from a resource glutton into the essential intelligence for a stable, green future, even optimizing its own consumption in colossal data centers. This is the new imperative: to use ecological hyper-intelligence to ensure our survival.

Your daily cup of tea, a ritual of comfort, might be coming with a disturbing, invisible ingredient: billions of microplastic and nanoplastic particles. A groundbreaking study put the spotlight on the convenience of the humble tea bag and its hidden environmental cost. But before you switch to coffee, remember: there are clear, easy, and delicious solutions to keep plastic out of your cup and our planet’s ecosystem. It’s time to choose better, brew better, and demand transparency from the brands we trust.

A “peace plan” promoted by political figures with vested interests—one in real estate, the other in territorial expansion—rarely rings true. An analysis of the proposed 21-point framework suggests its primary goal was not reconciliation, but a calculated ultimatum designed to fail, allowing military objectives to continue while sidestepping the urgent humanitarian and environmental crises in Gaza and the West Bank.