the Floods in Texas Tell Us About Climate Change
Digest more
CNN data analysis showed climate activists have not successfully convinced most Americans to fear climate change, with the percentage of afraid Americans staying the same as it was in 2000.
1don MSN
UCLA researchers have released an alarming new finding — the duration of heat waves is increasing faster than global warming itself.
CNN's Harry Enten cites polling that shows just 40% of 2025 Americans are "afraid" of climate change, the same number as in 2000. "Americans aren't afraid of climate change, climate activists have not successfully made the case to the American people,
This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, non-partisan news organization that covers climate, energy and the environment. Sign up for their newsletter here. Groups submitting comments on the latest stage of the Line 5 oil pipeline project in Michigan argue the U.
Harmful algae blooms have been rapidly producing in a place previously too cold to host the toxin: the Arctic.
Explore more
Defense departments need to embrace the green transition for national security and the planet, argues Richard Nugee, retired lieutenant general of the British Army.
The State Department on Friday fired the remaining staff working in the office responsible for international climate policy, including annual U.N. negotiations related to climate treaties, according to three people familiar with the matter.
Norfolk’s treasured Chrysler Museum of Art resides in a constant vulnerability due to the threat of rising waters from climate change. But the the museum has a plan.
Europe's latest spell of sizzling heat, which ended last week, caused a threefold rise in heat-related deaths because human-induced climate change boosted the intensity of the heat wave, British scientists said.
ROME—Pope Leo XIV prayed on Wednesday for the world to recognize the urgency of the climate crisis and “hear the cry of the poor,” as he celebrated the first papal Mass using a new set of prayers and readings inspired by Pope Francis’ environmental legacy.
Researchers agree that climate change has made torrential downpours more frequent—but the science gets murky when examining how strong the link is between an extreme event and climate change.