Rising sea levels, floods, erosion, melting glaciers, droughts, water shortages, extreme weather: the effects of climate change are tangible in many parts of the world.
Rising sea levels, floods, erosion, melting glaciers, droughts, water shortages, extreme weather: the effects of climate change are tangible in many parts of the world.
Rising sea levels, floods, erosion, melting glaciers, droughts, water shortages, extreme weather: the effects of climate change are tangible in many parts of the world. Flick trough the gallery to see how.
The wildfires that have destroyed hundreds of homes and blanketed entire cities with smoke are unprecedented, but climate scientists warn that these events could grow far worse if humans do not curb greenhouse gas emissions.
The wildfires that have destroyed hundreds of homes and blanketed entire cities with smoke are unprecedented, but climate scientists warn that these events could grow far worse if humans do not curb greenhouse gas emissions.
The wildfires that have destroyed hundreds of homes and blanketed entire cities with smoke are unprecedented, but climate scientists warn that these events could grow far worse if humans do not curb greenhouse gas emissions.
Scientists agree, says John Sutter, that atmospheric pollution is creating conditions that make environmental disasters more likely, bigger and costlier.
Rising sea levels, floods, erosion, melting glaciers, droughts, water shortages, extreme weather: the effects of climate change are tangible in many parts of the world.
Scientists have discovered a pristine, three-kilometre-long reef of giant rose-shaped corals off the coast of Tahiti, in waters thought to be deep enough to protect it from the bleaching effects of the warming ocean.
With climate disasters all over the world this summer, Paula Newton speaks to U.S. climate envoy John Kerry about what needs to be done to tackle the climate crisis.
An adaptation-only climate strategy will be ugly indeed.
Sean Yoro’s most important tool is the paddle board he balances on to create his fleeting, hauntingly beautiful artworks on ice.
This week’s global temperature records are probably the warmest in at least 100,000 years, one climate scientist explained.
From the vast lakes of the US to the mangrove forests of Bangladesh, this is what’s at stake.
Like much of the Northern Hemisphere, Europe was battered by extreme weather events over the summer, including record levels of rain that triggered deadly floods in Germany and Belgium, and heatwaves that contributed to wildfires in the south.
After visiting Tracy, a woman in California who is ready to flee her dream house to escape wildfires and other effects of climate catastrophe, John Sutter traveled halfway across the country, to Duluth, Minnesota to try to answer her question: Where can she go? Is anywhere safe? It turns out, Tracy isn’t alone in asking the question.
The series of weekend tornadoes that ripped through the parts of the US this weekend adds to another stretch of deadly and potentially unprecedented weather disasters that plagued the planet this year. Meteorologists and climate scientists say the latest outbreak is historic.