Without federal support, California may be the first domino to fall, as a polarized nation moves to take the economic reality of climate change into its own hands.
Last year was not only the hottest since record-keeping began in 1850 but was also the first to pass a threshold meant to limit the worst effects of climate change, the Copernicus ... the long-term ...
It breaks the previous record set in 2023, and pushes the world over a critical climate threshold, according to new data from ...
Climate change − ... Sea Ice Graph − which reports five-day running averages. However, Antarctic sea ice extent was higher in 1979 than in 2024 for most of the year, according to National ...
Each year, they identify climate change as a one of the top risks that ... the shops and restaurants on the Davos main drag have been taken over by corporations promoting their artificial ...
Persistent exposure to heatwaves, droughts, wildfires and more will take a toll on people’s bodies. We must learn how this ...
As more natural disasters and severe weather events take place, the impacts of global warming and climate change are being called into ... the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico has increased over the ...
Those targets are supposed to become more stringent over time ... global efforts to slow climate change, even as the world is on track to set yet another record hot year and has been lurching ...
In his first hours in office, Trump started the year-long process to withdraw ... the increased political polarization around climate change over the two decades following the Rio Earth Summit ...