Most climate news feels hopeless. Positive Charge, a new podcast from GeekWire, profiles the scientists, engineers, and ...
By David Lawder WASHINGTON, June 29 (Reuters) - The World Bank Group said on Monday it will "retire" its previous goal to ...
The record-breaking heat that’s scorching Europe day and night this month would not have been possible without climate change ...
A new poll suggests Republicans may be more movable on climate change than previously thought, plus more climate news.
Past Center surveys have found that Americans with higher levels of formal education are more likely to say human activity is a big cause of climate change. This pattern is driven by Democrats. In ...
A scientific analysis concluded that such high temperatures, across so much of the continent, would “not have been possible” ...
WELLINGTON, June 29 (Reuters) - A New Zealand climate activist said on Monday he has filed a High Court case challenging ...
Former NOAA staffers have launched a new website that provides climate information. It replaces a government site that was ...
Scott Detrow speaks with extreme weather researcher Theodore Keeping about Europe's hottest heatwave. With over 1,000 deaths ...
About six-in-ten Americans say countries around the world, including the U.S., will not do enough to avoid the worst effects of climate change. This growing pessimism is driven by Democrats.
Floods that historically had a 1% chance of striking a coastline in a year are now about 12 times more likely, on average.
New polling suggests people in the US and other wealthy countries underrate others’ anxiety about global warming.