Instructional Video13:47
TED Talks

TED: We need nuclear power to solve climate change | Joe Lassiter

12th - Higher Ed
Joe Lassiter is a deep thinker and straight talker focused on developing clean, secure and carbon-neutral supplies of reliable, low-cost energy. His analysis of the world's energy realities puts a powerful lens on the stubbornly touchy...
Instructional Video18:04
TED Talks

Juan Enriquez: Using biology to rethink the energy challenge

12th - Higher Ed
Juan Enriquez challenges our definition of bioenergy. Oil, coal, gas and other hydrocarbons are not chemical but biological products, based on plant matter -- and thus, growable. Our whole approach to fuel, he argues, needs to change.
Instructional Video12:05
SciShow

Quiz Show: Vlogbrothers Face-Off: Hank v. John!

12th - Higher Ed
Welcome back to SciShow Quiz Show! In this episode Hank will be competing with older brother John Green in a battle of science related trivia on behalf of Subbable subscribers Anna Dilley & Andrew Villarreal.
Instructional Video12:34
SciShow

Why Does the US Have So Many Power Outages?

12th - Higher Ed
The United States has a lot more power outages than other countries do, and fixing this problem will be a massive undertaking. Chapters View all Across the United States, the average customer loses power about once or twice a year, for a...
Instructional Video16:47
TED Talks

Dame Ellen MacArthur: The surprising thing I learned sailing solo around the world

12th - Higher Ed
What do you learn when you sail around the world on your own? When solo sailor Ellen MacArthur circled the globe – carrying everything she needed with her – she came back with new insight into the way the world works, as a place of...
Instructional Video4:55
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What is the tragedy of the commons? - Nicholas Amendolare

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Is it possible that overfishing, super germs, and global warming are all caused by the same thing? In 1968, a man named Garrett Hardin sat down to write an essay about overpopulation. Within it, he discovered a pattern of human behavior...
Instructional Video4:18
SciShow

How to Save Earth From...Us

12th - Higher Ed
Temperatures are rising, and greenhouse gases are being emitted faster than ever. What's a planet to do? Hank explains the recommendations of some of the world's top scientists to stem global warming.
Instructional Video11:28
TED Talks

TED: How to stop banks from investing in dirty energy | Lucie Pinson

12th - Higher Ed
Money is pollution's biggest driving force -- particularly, the cash invested in dirty energy projects, says financial responsibility campaigner Lucie Pinson. She shares a three-pronged approach to stop banks from funding fossil fuel...
Instructional Video16:33
TED Talks

Lord Nicholas Stern: The state of the climate — and what we might do about it

12th - Higher Ed
How can we begin to address the global, insidious problem of climate change — a problem that's too big for any one country to solve? Economist Nicholas Stern lays out a plan, presented to the UN's Climate Summit in 2014, showing how the...
Instructional Video8:33
TED Talks

TED: Let's launch a satellite to track a threatening greenhouse gas | Fred Krupp

12th - Higher Ed
When we talk about greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide gets the most attention -- but methane, which often escapes unseen from pipes and wells, has a far greater immediate impact on global warming. Environmentalist Fred Krupp has an idea to...
Instructional Video11:38
Crash Course

Medieval China: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
Like Egypt, Sumer, and Mesoamerica, ancient China represents a hydraulic civilization—one that maintained its population by diverting rivers to aid in irrigation—and one that developed writing thousands of years ago. Today, we’re going...
Instructional Video3:50
SciShow

Facts About Fracking

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us a summary of the important facts about fracking: what it is, why we do it, and how it actually isn't all butterflies and cupcakes.
Instructional Video11:34
TED Talks

TED: How we can curb climate change by spending two percent more on everything | Jens Burchardt

12th - Higher Ed
Would you pay two percent more for the carbon-neutral version of the products you buy and use every day? In this innovative talk, climate pathfinder Jens Burchardt walks us through the costs and considerations of producing...
Instructional Video6:48
TED Talks

Richard Sears: Planning for the end of oil

12th - Higher Ed
As the world's attention focuses on the perils of oil exploration, we present Richard Sears' talk from early February 2010. Sears, an expert in developing new energy resources, talks about our inevitable and necessary move away from oil....
Instructional Video8:11
TED Talks

Alex Laskey: How behavioral science can lower your energy bill

12th - Higher Ed
What's a proven way to lower your energy costs? Would you believe: learning what your neighbor pays. Alex Laskey shows how a quirk of human behavior can make us all better, wiser energy users, with lower bills to prove it.
Instructional Video4:26
TED-Ed

How much land does it take to power the world? | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
No matter how we make electricity, it takes up space. Coal requires mines, and plants to convert it into electricity. Nuclear power takes uranium mines, facilities to refine it, a reactor, and a place to store the spent fuel safely....
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

Are We Finally on the Road to Fusion Power?

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists working at a nuclear fusion facility in Oxford announced a record-breaking result. And while there's still a lot to figure out to make fusion viable, this brings us one step closer to realizing a technology with huge potential...
Instructional Video15:44
SciShow

Interview with EPA Administrator McCarthy

12th - Higher Ed
Hank interviews Administrator Gina McCarthy of the United States Environmental Protection Agency. They discuss getting people to care about climate change, the EPA's goals going into the United Nations Climate Change Conference, and the...
Instructional Video5:53
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How to create cleaner coal - Emma Bryce

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It takes a lot of fuel to heat our homes, preserve our food, and power our gadgets. And for 40 percent of the world, cheap, plentiful coal gets the job done. But coal also releases pollutants into the air, causing environmental damage...
Instructional Video7:50
Bozeman Science

Energy Consumption

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how humans have consumed energy through history and may consume energy in the future. Sources of energy have included food, animals, wood, wind, coal, oil, and natural gas. However non-renewable...
Instructional Video13:58
TED Talks

TED: How fear of nuclear power is hurting the environment | Michael Shellenberger

12th - Higher Ed
We're not in a clean energy revolution; we're in a clean energy crisis, says climate policy expert Michael Shellenberger. His surprising solution: nuclear. In this passionate talk, he explains why it's time to overcome longstanding fears...
Instructional Video9:33
SciShow

Is the Power Grid Ready for Green Energy?

12th - Higher Ed
Despite the rise of renewable energy, the backbone of the power grid is fossil fuels. Adapting the grid to green energy sources is more complicated than flipping a switch.
Instructional Video7:44
TED Talks

Al Gore: What comes after An Inconvenient Truth?

12th - Higher Ed
At TED2009, Al Gore presents updated slides from around the globe to make the case that worrying climate trends are even worse than scientists predicted, and to make clear his stance on "clean coal."
Instructional Video11:06
TED Talks

TED: How India could pull off the world's most ambitious energy transition | Varun Sivaram

12th - Higher Ed
India has a historic opportunity to power its industrialization with clean energy -- and its energy choices will make or break the world's fight against climate change, says clean energy executive, physicist and author Varun Sivaram....