News

Tax credits for EVs, rooftop solar, heat pumps, energy-efficient windows, and more are on the chopping block. Take advantage ...
Less accurate forecasts and reduced federal support may make local officials more skittish about calling lifesaving ...
The Atlantic’s first named storm of 2025 formed farther to the northeast than any June named storm on record, and is not a ...
Yale Climate Connections is a nonpartisan, multimedia service providing daily broadcast radio programming and original ...
On the heels of Otis and John, Erick is now the third storm in less than three years to strike Mexico’s southern Pacific ...
Americans are bananas for bananas. People slice them into cereal, fry them with pancakes, and bake them into bread – making bananas one of the most popular fruits in the nation. But a new study warns ...
Our knowledge of future climate change is largely dependent on complex computer simulation models. These models are huge – they are made up of more than 1 million lines of computer code representing ...
Transcript: When it rains in Newton, Massachusetts, water rushes off roads, down asphalt gullies, and into Cheesecake Brook – a small stream that was converted many years ago in ...
Between 80% and 89% of the world’s people want their governments to do more about climate change. This fact is the central tenet of the 89% Project for climate journalism.
Cuts, chaos, and climate change are converging to leave Americans more vulnerable to disaster than they were in 2005.
After reaching hurricane strength early Wednesday, Erick could become the earliest landfalling storm so strong along Mexico’s Pacific coast.
Pollution from the plants could contribute to heart attacks, ER visits, and long-term health harms over decades.