News

Oklahoma joins 24 states urging dismissal of Maryland lawsuits targeting oil giants, warning of threats to jobs, energy policy and state sovereignty.
Burning of fossil fuels, forests and grasslands sends small particles called aerosols into the air. High levels of aerosols can create a thick haze, cutting back on sunlight reaching Earth’s surface ...
Fraud, missed subrogation opportunities and customer experience can impact claims after a catastrophe, but AI can address ...
Earth has experienced both hot and cold periods over time, though warm times have been more common. That’s true of the last 485 million years, as seen in this timeline reported in 2024. Our genus, ...
To put the Himalayan data into context, researchers compared it with Mauna Loa, the world’s most referenced clean-air ...
Climate scientists and weather experts are clear: the deadly floods in Texas earlier this month were an entirely natural tragedy, with off-the-charts rainfall levels coming from lingering moisture ...
A soil-dwelling microbe has shown a surprising ability to trap carbon dioxide and turn it into rock. Scientists have ...
Unfounded rumors linking an extreme weather event to human attempts at weather modification are again spreading on social ...
New study finds that people in 12 African countries don’t fully accept that extreme weather disasters are caused by climate ...
Reviving floodplain wetlands slashes carbon emissions by 39% and restores critical ecosystem functions in one year—without ...
Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier sent a letter to all public airports in the state Monday to warn them of a new law banning any injection of chemicals to change the climate or weather.
Scientists warn that while reducing air pollution is vital for human health, it also exposes the Earth to stronger warming.