A strong majority of Americans say they're worried about climate. So why do they hear so little about it in the news?
A strong majority of Americans say they're worried about climate. So why do they hear so little about it in the news?
A Kwanzaa decoration is set up outside the New York Stock Exchange on December 18, 2020 in New York City. Many holiday events ...
Christmas Day will be quite warm across the U.S. only days after the winter solstice. Here is an explanation of why winter ...
As Earth's sea levels rise, it's becoming more important to keep an eye on the oceans, and the Sentinel-6b satellite will be ...
The Trump administration announced plans to dismantle the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.
The Trump administration is breaking up the National Center for Atmospheric Research, taking aim at one of the world's ...
In one study, these particles from high-altitude wildfire smoke created a dramatic cooling effect not accounted for in current climate models.
One of the defining themes of the past 11 months, and certainly one most pertinent to the climate beat, was “attacks on science and expertise,” which seem likely to continue into 2026.
It raised more than a few eyebrows when popular U.S. real estate app Zillow quietly removed climate risk ratings from home ...
Indicative of hope, the journal, Science, chose as its 2025 “science breakthrough of the year” the remarkable surge of ...
Jared Isaacman, the billionaire nominated twice to lead the agency, may draw some lessons from the tenure of another NASA ...