BBC Inside Science
A weekly show exploring science, its mysteries, and the debates it sparks.
57 articles
A weekly show exploring science, its mysteries, and the debates it sparks.
The Met Office says that 2025 is likely to be the UK's hottest year since records began.
The Wildlife Trusts say its is 'flabbergasted' by the sighting of the highest number of octopuses since 1950
Water company says it needs two new reservoirs and a recycling plant to cope with demand in Suffolk.
Whale breath collected by drones is giving clues to the health of wild humpbacks and other whales.
President Trump continues to shake up science. We look at the impact it’s already having.
In a new one-off documentary, the broadcaster and conservationist comes home - to London.
Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez says the shelters will be in public buildings across the country.
Carmakers, particularly in Germany, have lobbied heavily for concessions to the planned rules.
Critics say government changes to a flagship biodiversity policy could stall nature recovery.
New evidence shows that early neanderthals made fire 350 thousand years before we thought.
Survivors of a deadly typhoon in the Philippines have filed a claim against the UK's largest oil company.
The US and other governments derailed an agreement on a global environment study, its co-chair says.
Almost four decades after the first HIV treatment, is there finally a ‘functional’ cure?
Tracy Brabin talks to Radio Leeds about the Budget, COP30 and taxing tourists.
In true feline style, cats took their time in deciding when and where to join us on the sofa.
There was no clear commitment to phase out fossil fuels
We're still behind on our global warming targets after the big summit in Brazil.
What did we learn from a climate summit that ended in a deal with no new mention of fossil fuels?
Nearly 200 countries attended COP30, which aimed to commit the world to take more action on climate change.
Brazilian farmers want to end a ban on planting soya on cleared land, which critics say would spur deforestation.
The US president is notably absent from these UN climate talks, as are other world leaders, all of which prompts questions about the purpose of COP today.
A new study estimates that about half of all churches in England have bats living in them.
Could the government's radical plan to change the way the UK distributes electricity really bring down bills - or just lead to a postcode lottery?
It sounds like something from a sci-fi film - but some scientists believe this clever new tech could help alleviate strains on the UK care system
The BBC speaks to astronaut Eileen Collins, the first woman to pilot and command a Nasa spacecraft.
The Hollywood actor teams up with Kew’s Millenium Seed Bank as it celebrates its 25th anniversary.
President Trump intervened in the talks calling the deal a "green scam".
Australia's rainforests are the first in the world to make the "concerning" switch, say scientists.
The Advertising Standards Authority upheld a complaint by environment charity River Action.
South African photographer Wim van den Heever takes the main prize for his shot
India’s sunshine hours have fallen over the past 30 years due to clouds, aerosols and local weather.
The highest red alert is declared in one coastal province, as residents are urged to stay indoors.
Once endangered due to hunting, it is making a strong recovery thanks to global conservation efforts.
'Green social prescribing' schemes are being used by NHS doctors to improve patients' mental health.
The bald, subterranean rats are the world's longest-lived rodent.
The announcement was made by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm.
They are melting like never seen before, changing landscapes around the world beyond recognition.
Fifteen projects are shortlisted for a chance of winning the top £1m prizes at next month's environmental awards ceremony in Rio de Janeiro.
The BBC's Science Editor Rebecca Morelle goes behind the scenes with the team discovering what the melting of ice from over a million years ago can tell us.
The conservationist, who died aged 91 on Wednesday, challenged how we relate to the natural world.
Rats are multiplying at speed in urban areas. So, what's really behind the boom - and is it now unstoppable?
Unusual mudstones found on the Red Planet are potentially associated with ancient Martian microbes.
The Starship rocket is critical to the company's hopes of one day carrying people to the Moon and Mars.
The commander of Apollo 13 famously rescued his men from near certain death in space.
Of the 24 Nasa astronauts who travelled to the Moon in the Apollo missions of the 1960s and 1970s, just five remain.
The reactor would provide power for humans on the Moon but there are questions about feasibility.
Switzerland spends almost $500m a year on protective structures. Is it worth it - or, as some suggest, should people move away from the mountain villages at risk?
The spacecraft, which launched in 1972 on a mission to Venus, circled Earth for over five decades.
Could discoveries of alien life ever change the human psyche in how we view ourselves and each other?
Dolphins circled their capsule after it landed off the coast of Florida.
Differences in seawater colour could reveal how tiny Antarctic creatures are faring in a warming world.
Bennu contains minerals and thousands of organic molecules, including the chemical components that make up DNA.
Officials at Elon Musk's company said the upper stage was lost, minutes after it launched.
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos's space company blasts its first rocket into orbit in a challenge to Elon Musk.
Advances in technology raise questions about the need to send people to space - and the risks and cost
The planet Uranus and its five biggest moons may not be the sterile worlds scientists have long thought.