Ninety-nine per cent of scientists believe in human-related climate change. So why does the general public lag so far behind?
This story was originally published by Yale e360 and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
A new ‘Climate at a Glance’ Book Challenges ‘Climate Crisis’ Narrative with Hard Data, discussing: Extreme Weather and ...
New research suggests that trying to change people's climate habits won't hurt support for big picture solutions.
Physicists are fond of Gedankenexperimente—thought experiments that are difficult or impossible to perform in the real world. Schrödinger’s cat is a well-known example of a thought experiment, used to ...
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is right to rescind its endangerment finding for greenhouse gas emissions for motor ...
Climate change science integrates multidisciplinary research to quantify, understand and ultimately mitigate alterations in Earth’s climate system driven predominantly by anthropogenic activities.
Climate change is making some regions less habitable for humans, whether by raising sea levels, hurting crop yields, or ...
In the upper Abbay basin, cradle of the Blue Nile, a team of researchers have predicted soils of the future: what will happen to soil organic carbon if we bet on regenerative agriculture—returning ...
The Dispatch reports on the viability of Pigouvian taxes to combat climate change, emphasizing their market-driven benefits ...
Several U.S. climate regulations aim to reduce burning of fossil fuels, a driver of climate change. Visions of America/Joseph Sohm/Universal Images Group via Getty Images Most of the United States’ ...