Climate, energy news roundup: What’s making news with the environment
The World Meteorological Organization warns that record-hot global temperatures in recent years are just the start of the kind of heat we’re headed toward.
The World Meteorological Organization warns that record-hot global temperatures in recent years are just the start of the kind of heat we’re headed toward.
House Republicans are confident that pushing the production and use of fossil fuels will be a winning political strategy in 2024.
Earth Day is April 22, yet the United States experienced $165 billion in damage from weather and climate disasters in 2022.
The House SEEC favorably responded to the EPA’s proposal on greenhouse gas emission standards for vehicles sold in the United States.
The odds are against us. That is the bottom line in the latest IPCC report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) on global warming, the most comprehensive scientific report to date.
Scientists have long cautioned that global warming would lead to wetter and drier extremes—increasingly severe rainfall and more intense droughts around the world.
A Charlottesville-based nonprofit is bringing together comedians and climate experts to help save the planet.
This January was the warmest on record in seven states, including the entirety of New England.
There are many draws to Super Bowl Sunday. From the food, halftime show and the commercials, for many, it’s the social event of the year. Oh, and then there’s the actual game, if anyone is actually watching that.
Personal-finance website WalletHub released its report on 2023’s Best & Worst States to Start a Business.
Our content is free to read, but we do have bills to pay. Pitch in and help us keep the community informed.