News

Global warming does not affect our planet evenly. Some areas such as the Arctic region or high mountain peaks warm faster ...
One new study identifies a 17% increase in the destructive potential of the strongest nor’easters, while another bolsters ...
Satellite data suggests cloud darkening is responsible for much of the warming since 2001, and the good news is that it is a ...
A new study suggests that recent rapid global warming may be linked to falling sulphur dioxide pollution, which has dimmed ...
Polluted air may have been masking the full effects of global warming. Cleaner air could now be revealing more of the ...
Twenty-five years ago this month, Dan Sarewitz and I published a widely read and discussed article in The Atlantic Monthly titled, Breaking the Global Warming Gridlock (unpaywalled version here).
Since 2019, the UK has been committed to the target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Legally binding net zero targets form the basis for national efforts to meet the international goals ...
Global warming is happening, but not statistically ‘surging,’ reveals the new study which was co-authored by a Lancaster University statistician (file photo) ...
This recent spike of global warming; however, doesn't come as a total shock. There was some expectation that the global temperature would approach a new record this summer.
“Global warming really does mean ocean warming,” Kevin E. Trenberth, a co-author of the review and a scholar at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, said in an interview from New Zealand.