News

In 2023 and 2024, the hottest years on record, more than 78 million acres of forests burned around the globe. The fires sent ...
With extreme weather on the rise and sea levels creeping higher, Americans are starting to ask a once-unthinkable question: ...
As climate change warms average global temperatures, hailstones larger than pingpong or golf balls will become more frequent — likely worsening the weather hazard’s already billions of dollars in ...
Bark beetles have impacted nearly 80% of Colorado’s pine forests, and yet ecologists say the devastation is a sign of climate ...
A senior Humberside Fire & Rescue Service officer has highlighted the impact of the recent hot, dry weather on fire call-outs ...
Climate change has transformed summer into a season of extremes, leading to intense heat waves, droughts and wildfires that ...
A senior Humberside Fire & Rescue Service officer noted it was "significantly challenging" when firefighters are trying to ...
The latest science on the link between climate change and natural disasters — and how they may be playing out where you live.
Ground slumping in yedoma permafrost after a wildfire, in the interior of Alaska. Yedoma permafrost generally contains large ...
What really fueled the LA fire? This video goes beyond the smoke to reveal how climate change, policy missteps, and urban growth combined to spark one of Los Angeles’s most devastating blazes.
Experts say climate change is making extreme weather events more frequent and severe, but that our attitudes and actions haven't kept up.