Donate

Yaghoob Farnam

The Conversation
A red car and a large salt truck drive on a snowy road next to a mountain.

Can bacteria help us prevent salt damage to concrete roads and bridges?

April 4, 2019Science

Spring has long been filled with bumps and potholes in roads, many of which are caused by the salt that makes driving safe all winter. New research has shown how this annual problem could become a thing of the past with bacteria, which are being used in the fight to maintain our roads and save our streets from costly damage.

Latest Headlines

Spain taps into immigrant and refugee communities to fill vacant shepherding jobs
Pakistan’s solar revolution
French public media is being targeted by the far-right
The humanitarian catastrophe the world continues to overlook
Anti-immigrant sentiment rises in South Africa
Are women behind the move in Spain to legalize undocumented immigrants?
Scottish soccer fans aim to skirt World Cup train costs by hiring a fleet of school buses
Plan to kill dozens of wild hippos linked to Pablo Escobar generates fierce debate in Colombia
Asia’s ‘cleanest village’ tries to find a balance between tourists and calm
Efforts to decolonize Berlin as UN calls for reparations to right ‘historical wrongs’
More stories

The World is a public radio program that crosses borders and time zones to bring home the stories that matter.

Produced by

Thanks to our sponsor

  1. Progressive Insurance logo

Major funding provided by

  1. Carnegie Corporation of New York

  1. About
  2. Contact
  3. Donate
  4. Meet the Team
  5. Privacy
  6. Terms of use

©2026 The World from PRX

PRX is a 501(c)(3) organization recognized by the IRS: #263347402.