Rising temperatures stoked by global warming are increasing the odds of both severe drought and heavier precipitation.
The weather is something we all experience, whether it’s a sunny day that brings a smile or a storm that keeps us indoors.
Nearly 40 percent of Americans experienced extreme weather last year — and those who did were more likely to be concerned ...
The damage climate change will inflict on the world's economy is likely to have been massively underestimated, according to ...
Almost three-fourths of older adults have experienced some type of extreme weather event in the past two years and are ...
A growing number of Americans say extreme weather is affecting their lives, especially in the western United States, ...
For the first time in over a decade, climate change did not appear on the U.S. intelligence community's annual threat ...
A new model suggests that timber production in Minnesota could decrease by half as windstorms intensify with climate change.
Warm temperatures and erratic rainfall due to climate change are taking a toll on Northern Ireland's health and farming ...
Around the globe, rising temperatures stoked by climate change are increasing the odds ... But how can global warming cause both drier and wetter extremes? Here’s what experts say.
Around the globe, hotter temperatures stoked by climate change are increasing the odds of both severe drought and heavier ...
“Because climate change is just destabilizing different parts of the world, through extreme weather, through droughts, through sea level rise…the intelligence community wants to be ready for ...