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The 'king of poisons' is building up in rice. Throughout the Yangtze River Delta, a region in southern China famed for its widespread rice production, farmers grow belts of slender green stalks.
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Rice feeds more than half of the world’s population. Climate change is loading the beloved grain with arsenic, creating a “scary” health burden.
By contrast, the TSIP's location is remarkably rural, with its shiny new buildings rising above a vista of rice and sugar fields. In fact, Tainan was chosen partly because it was close to various ...
Grist reports that climate change is loading rice—the beloved grain that feeds more than half of the world's population—with increasing amounts of arsenic, creating a "scary" health burden.
Grist reports that climate change is loading rice—the beloved grain that feeds more than half of the world's population—with increasing amounts of arsenic, creating a "scary" health burden.
Grist reports that climate change is loading rice-the beloved grain that feeds more than half of the world’s population-with increasing amounts of arsenic, creating a “scary” health burden.
Back in 2014, Wang and an international team of climate, plant, and public health scientists started working together on a research project that would end up taking them close to a decade to complete.
Grist reports that climate change is loading rice—the beloved grain that feeds more than half of the world's population—with increasing amounts of arsenic, creating a "scary" health burden.