Extensive evidence, including global temperature and sea ice data, shows Earth's climate is changing due to human activity.
Rising temperatures are fueled, in part, by declining cloud cover — which could be a potential climate feedback loop.
Earth passed the 1.5°C warming limit in 2024. The Arctic is warming four times faster than the rest of the world.
As the trend towards the international dispersion of certain value chain activities produces challenges, discover policies to meet these Tax transparency and international co-operation Enhanced ...
Could future maps give us a glimpse of what the world's population will look like in 2100? Experts are drawing up maps which ...
Climate scientists present a realistic supercomputer simulation that resolves the complex interactions between fire, vegetation, smoke and the atmosphere. The authors find that increasing greenhouse ...
Global warming is producing a rapid loss of plant species—according to estimates, roughly 600 plant species have died out ...
New research at NAU looks at faster warming in the Arctic, and highlights concern about risks to the U.S. of a political ...
As pandemic lockdowns forced humans into isolation, Earth's vegetation was thriving. The year 2020 was the greenest in modern ...
New assessment warns area the size of the USA will become too hot during extreme heat events for even healthy young humans to maintain a safe body temperature if we hit 2 degrees Celsuis above ...
The latest report from the Energy Transitions Commission, Achieving Zero-Carbon Buildings: Electric, Efficient and Flexible, ...