
Attribution Science Linking Warming to Disasters Is Rapidly Advancing
Event attribution is one of the fastest developing areas of climate science since it began 20 years ago
Event attribution is one of the fastest developing areas of climate science since it began 20 years ago
For meerkats in the Kalahari Desert, rising temperatures spark deadly outbreaks of tuberculosis.
The need to use coal to boost power supplies illustrates the challenge of quickly increasing renewable energy to avoid bigger climate impacts
NOAA’s Annual Greenhouse Gas Index finds that greenhouse gases trapped nearly 50 percent more heat last year than they did in 1990
Drivers tallied 753 billion miles in the first three months of the year, the highest total on record
The Loop Current in the Gulf of Mexico has fueled major storms such as Hurricane Katrina
With what will be one of the world's most advanced hurricane simulators, researchers will be able to reproduce wind, rain and storm surge
A weeks-long heat wave in India and Pakistan was 30 times more likely because of human-caused warming
Energy planners are working to increase the grid’s reliability to keep the power on during droughts, wildfires and heat waves
Earlier snowmelt can leave less water available to generate power during the height of summer
A new study links sea ice decline with increasing wildfire weather in the Western U.S.
A new wave of attribution research links the economic cost of weather events to climate change
Structures first deployed as artificial reefs are being used in the Northeast to combat the force of waves as ocean levels rise
Hundreds of people were killed and thousands of homes destroyed in Durban after torrential rains unleashed flooding
Without the cooling effect of aerosols, warmer oceans have provided more fuel to storms
Gender discrimination multiplies the challenges women face from climate change, a new U.N. report says
La Niña, climate change and an increasing human presence are all raising wildfire risks
We need to protect vulnerable people from killer heat without destroying the environment
There is debate about whether the agency will rely on carbon capture to achieve emissions reductions
Sustained temperatures above 110 degrees Fahrenheit threaten people, wheat crops and power supplies
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