The next five-year period "will be the warmest on record," the World Meteorological Organization warned.
Steel made using hydrogen and powered by renewable energy could drastically reduce carbon emissions and employ a well-paid, industrial workforce.
If this is a sign of what's to come, the U.S. West is in for another dangerously hot summer.
Historic U.S. power plant regulation focuses on a controversial climate technology known as carbon capture and storage.
The fires may have helped cause the rare triple-year atmospheric shift, a study found.
Our current models may have underestimated how fast our warming oceans are rising and how fast glaciers recede, a new study says.
Plugging these wells could cost up to $30 billion, according to a new study.
His intentions may be noble, but that's hardly good enough.
The legislation restricts fossil fuel lines for heating and cooking in most new construction statewide beginning 2029.
It's unclear how the state would implement an anti-green investing bill that DeSantis signed this week—and that's by design.
NOAA is using a retrofitted 1950s bomber to collect stratospheric data, as part of research into controversial solar geoengineering.
The record-breaking snowpack is melting with higher spring temperatures after a super-wet winter.
The country has entered yet another year of dry conditions, and communities are desperate for relief.
Good news: He's gone. Bad news: Someone else will pick up the climate disinformation mantle.
Severe drought conditions throughout the U.S. last year lowered the reservoir's water levels and revealed several sets of human remains.
Less than a year after the Senator helped pass a historic piece of climate legislation, he says he'd potentially vote to repeal it.
Politico reports that Justice Gorsuch did not list the buyer of the property on financial disclosure documents.
Faux concern is the name of the game as Republicans begin to admit the climate is in trouble.
Retardants help to stop the spread of wildfires, but the chemicals often end up in waterways.
The $30 billion barrier may fail to block climate-fueled storm surge—and won’t prevent other urban flooding in Houston.