The planet has been shattering heat records for the past two years. That was expected to ease in January — and the fact that ...
Last month set a new record for the hottest January ever documented, surprising climate experts who expected heat to ease up ...
In this edition of the newsletter, we take a look at the rising carbon emissions of AI systems, the impact of dengue and ...
New research at NAU looks at faster warming in the Arctic, and highlights concern about risks to the U.S. of a political ...
Mike Farrell, one of the owners of Shamrock Farm in the Comox Valley, has noticed a change in weather patterns since the farm ...
Without federal support, American communities will struggle to deal with a challenge as pervasive as climate change, market ...
The world warmed to yet another monthly heat record in January, despite an abnormally chilly United States, a cooling La Nina and predictions of a slightly less hot 2025, according to reports.
Rising temperatures are fueled, in part, by declining cloud cover — which could be a potential climate feedback loop.
As the world passes 1.5 degrees C of warming, a Cambridge scholar says that putting a deadline for action was the wrong way ...
The world's frozen oceans, which help to keep the planet cool, currently have less ice than ever previously recorded, ...
In addition to swearing in Dr. Mike Sfraga as the United States’ first Ambassador-at-Large for the Arctic Region, the State ...