Enough water to fill Sydney Harbor drained through a crack in the ice with the force of Niagara Falls.
Benefits of climate change could include, per the website, "new crops such as oranges, grapes and peaches flourish[ing] in the UK."
The lobbyist caught admitting internal strategy on tape has apologized, while Exxon seeks to distance itself.
A sting by Greenpeace UK exposes how the company talks a big climate game while ensuring nothing actually gets done.
The duo dug up the iconic trees and then buried them in a hole like some kind of mafia hit on the endangered species.
A new report chronicles the history of one of the most prominent denier groups—and helps us preview what's coming next.
As disasters mount and official aid falls short, people are turning to informal networks and community groups for direct, fast help.
Hundreds of cars were left abandoned or submerged on highways after Detroit faced intense rain this weekend.
Gov. DeSantis signed a bill that would keep cities from making 100% renewable energy goals.
An Australian Aboriginal group said Rio Tinto hid the destruction of important cultural artifacts from them for decades.
What's more, the administration is going on the offensive against Indigenous and environmental groups.
The UK may greenlight a huge new oil project just months before it hosts a "last-chance" global climate summit. Greta isn't having it.
Researchers say they have solved the tricky problem of making a totally passive, 24/7 water generating system.
Reddit has led the incredible rise of Torchlight Energy Resources stock in recent days.
Miami's mayor is gunning to make Magic City a crypto paradise.
Some charts of how fast we're warming with totally unrelated quotes.
Our recycling system sucks in the U.S., thanks in part to polluters. How do we start caring again?
The state's governor signed a bill into law this week legalizing human composting.
Records were smashed left and right this week in as a monster heat wave sweeps much of the U.S.
Crayfish exposed to small levels of SSRIs acted "more boldly" than usual, new research shows.