the US Government Shutdown Impacts Climate Work
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Earth Is Getting Darker: What This Shocking Climate Trend Means for Our Future
A new study published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) has revealed that Earth is reflecting progressively less sunlight, an observation that carries significant weight for our understanding of climate change.
The Trump administration had tried to eviscerate climate offices before the shutdown. Now, the cuts are deeper.
At the U.N. and Climate Week events it was often the U.S. versus the world on climate action. The evolving economics of clean energy might get the final word.
Coffee growers are facing climate change, labor shortages and incomes below the poverty line. On International Coffee Day, we take stock of the industry behind the beverage.
Here’s what to know about why leaves change color in the fall—and how the process is being impacted by climate change.
At a Climate Forward live event, Senator Brian Schatz, Democrat of Hawaii, said his party needed to change the way it talked about climate issues.
Gov. Gavin Newsom criticized President Trump's rejection of climate science as economic self-sabotage and 'an abomination,' warning the country is 'doubling down on stupid.'
“What an abomination. What a fraud,” Newsom said Wednesday at a climate event hosted by The New York Times the day after Trump’s speech to the United Nations, which included a tirade against climate policies and climate science.
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A recipe for avoiding 15 million deaths a year and climate disaster is fixing food, scientists say
Scientists are presenting new evidence that the worst effects of climate change can’t be avoided without a major transformation of food systems. The new
A new survey released by the University of Houston's Hobby School of Public Affairs found that while the vast majority of Houstonians believe in climate change, there is a political divide about whether they think it's being caused primarily by “human activities.
Live Science on MSN
The Panama Canal needs a staggering amount of water to operate. Climate change could threaten that, study warns
The vital commercial artery depends on a supply of fresh water to move ships between the two oceans. Drought conditions that were once rare could become common by the end of the century, greatly impacting the canal’s operation.