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#climate-change
fromFortune
1 day ago
US news

The U.S. just had its hottest March in 132 years. Scientists say to buckle up for the rest of the year | Fortune

Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

A New Narrative for Planetary Health in the Hybrid Era

Perceiving crises as external leads to helplessness and disengagement, while recognizing agency fosters positive outcomes and behavior change.
Poker
fromFuturism
5 days ago

Polymarket Has Turned Our Climate Apocalypse Into a Casino

Climate change is leading to increased weather-related betting as people seek to profit from disasters.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Can We Measure Climate Change's Impact on Mental Health?

Climate change significantly impacts mental health, but tracking these effects is challenging due to inadequate data and attribution issues.
Europe news
fromwww.dw.com
1 hour ago

March second warmest on record says global warming monitor

Global sea surface temperatures are near record highs, indicating a likely shift towards El Nino conditions this year.
Skiing
fromiRunFar
1 day ago

Every Rain Drop

Winter seems to have been skipped entirely, leading to concerns about drought and its impact on local economies.
fromFortune
1 day ago
US news

The U.S. just had its hottest March in 132 years. Scientists say to buckle up for the rest of the year | Fortune

Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

A New Narrative for Planetary Health in the Hybrid Era

Perceiving crises as external leads to helplessness and disengagement, while recognizing agency fosters positive outcomes and behavior change.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Can We Measure Climate Change's Impact on Mental Health?

Climate change significantly impacts mental health, but tracking these effects is challenging due to inadequate data and attribution issues.
Canada news
fromwww.cbc.ca
15 hours ago

Environment Canada to use AI in new weather forecasting model | CBC News

Environment and Climate Change Canada will enhance weather forecasts using a hybrid model that combines AI and traditional forecasting methods.
#extreme-heat
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Non-survivable': heatwaves are already breaching human limits, with worse to come, study finds

Extreme heat is creating non-survivable conditions for humans, especially older individuals, during heatwaves that have already caused thousands of deaths.
OMG science
fromMail Online
1 day ago

Ominous study reveals what will happen if the Gulf Stream collapses

The collapse of the AMOC could lead to significant global temperature changes, cooling the Northern Hemisphere while warming the Southern Hemisphere.
fromwww.bbc.com
1 week ago

Fewer heat-related deaths in 2025 despite warmest summer

The UK Health Security Agency reported around 1,504 heat-associated deaths in England during summer 2025, roughly half the predicted 3,039, despite the season being the warmest on record.
UK news
fromNature
3 days ago

'Net zero' isn't madness: the staggering economic costs of climate change

The overarching message of The Economics of Climate Change: The Stern Review was that failing to invest in mitigating climate change would exact an alarmingly high price, estimated between 5% and 20% of global GDP per year.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Arctic ice loss brings dual heatwaves to Europe and eastern Asia

The study highlights how rapid Arctic warming increases the frequency of extreme weather events, particularly concurrent heatwaves across Europe and eastern Asia.
Europe news
#sea-level-rise
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Sea-level rise is a health crisis and we must hold polluters accountable | Christiana Figueres

Sea-level rise is a present-day health crisis affecting communities, especially Indigenous peoples, through physical, emotional, and cultural harm.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Global sea levels have been underestimated due to poor modelling, research suggests

Global sea levels are 30cm higher on average than previously modeled, with some regions 100-150cm higher, requiring reassessment of coastal climate impacts.
Non-profit organizations
fromNature
2 weeks ago

'Continuity over novelty': why environmental science needs to rethink its focus

The closure of forest-service research offices threatens long-term ecological research and institutional memory in the US.
fromMail Online
3 weeks ago

Revealed: How many will DIE by 2050 if we don't curb climate change

Rising temperatures are projected to increase the prevalence of physical inactivity, translating into additional premature deaths and productivity losses, especially in tropical regions. Prioritising heat-adaptive urban design, subsidised climate-controlled exercise facilities, and targeted heat-risk communication is essential to mitigate these emerging health and economic burdens, in addition to ambitious emissions reductions.
Public health
Coronavirus
fromMail Online
3 weeks ago

Climate change is fuelling deadly disease outbreaks, study warns

Climate change-driven extreme weather events directly cause disease outbreaks, with 60% of Peru's 2023 dengue cases linked to cyclone-induced rainfall and warm temperatures.
Environment
fromNature
3 weeks ago

AI set to map risks of future climate disasters

Brazil is developing an AI agent to provide climate-disaster information and preparedness guidance to residents, integrating AI, simulations, and citizen participation for household-level risk management.
Science
fromNature
1 month ago

The first ice-core record of historical atmospheric hydrogen levels

Atmospheric hydrogen levels fluctuate with climate changes and have increased significantly since pre-industrial times due to human activities, requiring consideration in projections of future emissions impacts.
fromState of the Planet
3 weeks ago

Can Capitalism Solve the Climate Crisis?

Absolutely, I have experienced investing in a way that green growth has led to both equitable growth and decarbonization, but also have lived experience of what degrowth can do to a country, and how, in my view, [degrowth] is not really a solution.
Environment
Environment
fromNature
3 weeks ago

Can AI models reliably forecast extreme weather events?

AI-based weather forecasting models offer significant speed advantages over physics-based systems but raise concerns about reliability for rare, extreme weather events.
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

The Blind Spot at the Top of the World

He had flown in from Mar-a-Lago and, he told me, was there to observe. The next day, he watched as Åsa Rennermalm, a Rutgers University professor who studies polar regions, sat onstage with European foreign ministers and spoke out against cuts to U.S. science funding. "A leading US Arctic scientist is on stage absolutely ripping her country to the delight of the audience," Dans wrote on X. "Embarassing." He punctuated his post with an American-flag emoji.
US politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Extreme heat lab: enduring the climate of the future

"So whenever people think about hot weather, they always talk about the temperature," he says. "There's two issues with that. First of all, most people don't realise that the temperature is measured in the shade. So if you're in direct solar radiation, the amount of heat stress you're exposed to is much greater as it will stress your body out a lot more."
Public health
Science
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Economics has failed on the climate crisis. This complexity scientist has a plan to fix that

An agent-based global economic super-simulator could forecast crises and guide policy, with a ~$100m build cost and massive potential ROI from crisis prevention.
fromThe Nation
4 weeks ago

A World on Fire Needs More Climate Reporting-Not Less

Covering Climate Now was formed in 2019 in response to the climate silence that then prevailed in much of the press, especially in the United States. Over the years that followed, hundreds of newsrooms joined our effort, and press coverage of the story began to reflect the scale of the crisis. Newsrooms beefed up their climate reporting teams; they confronted misinformation that sought to play down the problem; they thought creatively about how to find the climate connection on every beat.
Environment
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

A sobering preview': extreme heat now affects one in three people globally, study finds

One-third of the world's population now lives in areas where extreme heat severely restricts safe daily activities, with elderly people experiencing over 900 hours annually of heat-limited outdoor time.
Environment
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Scientists pump tonnes of chemicals into ocean to stop global warming

Ocean Alkalinity Enhancement uses alkaline chemicals to increase ocean pH and boost CO2 absorption, but ecological impacts on marine life remain poorly understood.
Science
fromState of the Planet
2 months ago

Sea Levels Are Rising-But in Greenland, They Will Fall

Sea levels around Greenland are projected to fall by roughly 0.9 m (low emissions) to 2.5 m (high emissions) by 2100.
#climate-acceleration
fromNature
1 month ago
Environment

The world is getting hotter faster - its pace nearly doubled in the past decade

fromNature
1 month ago
Environment

The world is getting hotter faster - its pace nearly doubled in the past decade

Environment
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 month ago

Letters: Global warming isn't a hoax; it's a scientific consensus

Scientific consensus from 97-99% of climate scientists confirms Earth is warming primarily due to human activity, not natural cycles alone.
Environment
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Global warming has accelerated significantly since 2015, study reveals

Global warming has accelerated to 0.35°C per decade over the past 10 years, double the 1970-2015 rate, threatening to exceed the 1.5°C Paris Agreement limit before 2030 without urgent CO2 emission reductions.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 months ago

Author Correction: Increasingly negative tropical waterinterannual CO2 growth rate coupling

The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was misapplied; corrected analyses give slightly larger P-values and confirm water–CGR correlations become more negative over time (P < 0.1).
OMG science
fromEsquire
1 month ago

This Weird Effect of Climate Change Is Scaring the Hell Out of Me

A 5,000-year-old Psychrobacter strain from cave ice carries multidrug resistance and antimicrobial activity, posing potential AMR risks if released by melting ice.
#global-warming
fromFortune
1 month ago
Environment

The last 3 years were the hottest ever recorded. Here's why we may look back at them as some of the coolest we remember | Fortune

Environment
fromFortune
1 month ago

The last 3 years were the hottest ever recorded. Here's why we may look back at them as some of the coolest we remember | Fortune

2025 was the third-hottest year on record despite cooling factors like La Niña, reduced solar activity, and fewer wildfires, indicating hidden warming influences are masking expected temperature decreases.
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Scientists are baffled to discover 3,100 glaciers SURGING

'They save up ice like a savings account and then spend it all very quickly like a Black Friday event.'
Science
Environment
fromNature
1 month ago

Climate change and geopolitics threaten water supplies - but disaster is not inevitable

Global water systems face crisis from overuse, pollution, and climate change, requiring urgent strengthening of international water-sharing treaties with dynamic monitoring systems.
#climate-policy
fromwww.nature.com
2 months ago

Atmospheric H2 variability over the past 1,100 years

Warwick, N., Griffiths, P., Keeble, J., Archibald, A., &amp; Pyle, J. Atmospheric implications of increased Hydrogen use. GOV.UK https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/atmospheric-implications-of-increased-hydrogen-use (2022).
Environment
Environment
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Forests Are Steadily Crawling North, Satellite Imagery Shows

Boreal forests are shifting northward and expanding due to warming, altering carbon sequestration potential and increasing young forest cover.
Environment
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Earth on Track to Become Uninhabitable, Scientists Say

Multiple Earth systems are approaching destabilization, risking cascading tipping points that could commit the planet to a high-temperature 'hothouse Earth' trajectory.
Environment
fromEarth911
2 months ago

Guest Idea: Climate Risk Has Become A Defining Economic Issue

Climate-driven financial risks threaten housing and public budgets while large-scale clean-energy and durable carbon-removal investments (geothermal, biochar, novel hydrogen) accelerate to build resilience.
Environment
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Think this is bad? Scientists say UK winters will get even WETTER

UK winter rainfall increases about 7% per 1°C of global warming, escalating flood risk and mirroring changes predicted two decades ahead.
fromState of the Planet
2 months ago

Unexpected Climate Feedback Links Antarctic Ice Sheet With Reduced Carbon Uptake

Ice-sheet retreat lined up with low algae growth over the past ~500,000 years, implying less CO₂ uptake in parts of the Southern Ocean during warm periods. The study points to iceberg-delivered, iron-rich sediments from West Antarctica during warm intervals, not windblown dust. The iron-bearing minerals in these sediments were highly weathered and not readily bioavailable to marine algae. If WAIS keeps shrinking, similar sediment delivery could weaken Southern Ocean carbon uptake, creating feedback that could amplify climate change.
Environment
Environment
fromNature
2 months ago

Exceeding 1.5 C requires rethinking accountability in climate policy

Global temperatures have exceeded 1.5°C, requiring rapid pursuit of net-negative emissions, expanded adaptation, loss-and-damage response, and accountability to prevent further harm.
Environment
fromTheregister
1 month ago

Study questions claims AI will solve the climate crisis

New datacenters' energy demand is driving increased fossil-fuel electricity generation, undermining claims that AI will mitigate climate change.
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Flawed economic models mean climate crisis could crash global economy, experts warn

Flawed economic models underestimate cascading climate risks, risking accelerated global financial collapse as tipping points and extreme events intensify and economies face unmanageable shocks.
fromState of the Planet
2 months ago

Can Carbon Markets Offset the Emissions We Can't Eliminate?

Carbon markets are simultaneously promoted as an essential climate financing tool, and criticized as a license to pollute. A carbon market puts a price on greenhouse gas emissions via carbon credits that get bought and sold, almost like stocks. A credit represents one metric ton of CO 2 that has been avoided or removed through a specific project. A project could target emissions through agricultural practices, CO 2 capture or reforestation.
Environment
Environment
fromwww.dw.com
2 months ago

Scientists warn of risks as private money enters geoengineer

Private companies and investors are increasingly pursuing experimental solar geoengineering despite controversy, regulatory gaps, and potential wide-ranging impacts.
fromArs Technica
2 months ago

COVID-19 cleared the skies but also supercharged methane emissions

The remaining question, though, was where all this methane was coming from in the first place. Throughout the pandemic, there was speculation that the surge might be caused by super-emitter events in the oil and gas sector, or perhaps a lack of maintenance on leaky infrastructure during lockdowns. But the new research suggests that the source of these emissions was not what many expected. The microbial surge
Environment
Environment
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Study finds global increase in hot, dry days ideal for wildfires

Hot, dry, windy days ideal for extreme wildfires have nearly tripled globally over 45 years; human-caused climate change drives over half of that increase.
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