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Climate Change

It’s Too Hot In Europe–Again

Europeans are experiencing their second heat wave this summer. One climate scientist called the weather event a “sad inevitability.”

By Lauren Dalban

People walk through Place du Trocadéro during the second major heat wave of the year in Paris on June 18. Credit: Jerome Gilles/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Weathering Extremes at the World Cup as High Heat and Torrential Rain Hit Games

By Kiley Price

Delegates from around the world attend the opening plenary of the latest round of climate negotiations on June 8 in Bonn, Germany. Credit: Lara Murillo/UNFCCC

United Nations Climate Talks in Bonn Marked by ‘Sidestepping and Stalling’

By Bob Berwyn

A person wears a hat for shade during a heat wave on March 20 in Redondo Beach, Calif. The March heat wave that blistered the Western U.S. foreshadows more extreme heat this summer, former NOAA climate scientists said in a briefing this week. Credit: Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images

Scientists Warn of Summer Heat Spikes as Global Warming Edges Toward 2C

By Bob Berwyn

‘Sponge Cities’ Are Catching On. But Can They Handle Supercharged Storms?

By Kiley Price

A resilient coral reef in Siquijor, Philippines. New research shows more reefs may be able to survive climate change than previously thought. Credit: Steve De Neef

More Coral Reefs May Survive Climate Change Than Scientists Once Thought

By Teresa Tomassoni

Carbon monoxide and non-methane volatile organic compounds are named as major sources of indirect contributions to global warming in a new paper. Credit: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

The Climate Change Culprits Not Addressed by Global Policy

By Nina Sablan

An aerial view over Miami’s Biscayne Bay at sunset. Credit: Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Biscayne Bay Is Slowly Becoming the Ocean

By Kate Waxman

Heat Is Killing Wildlife Across the Animal Kingdom. A New Forecasting Tool May Help.

By Kiley Price

Harvey Goodsky Jr. and his wife Morningstar harvest wild rice on Minnesota’s Rice Lake in September 2017. Credit: Richard Tsong-Taatarii/Star Tribune via Getty Images

Wild Rice Faces Numerous Threats—and Has Determined Protectors

By Susan Cosier

A shrinking mangrove forest is seen at the edge of the Freetown Peninsula coastline in Sierra Leone on April 12. Credit: Gemma Bonfiglioli/AFP via Getty Images

Mangrove Forests Fight Climate Change—But Climate Change Is Fighting Back

By Kiley Price

Heat Is a Growing Threat to the Hajj—Even in Spring

By Kiley Price

A diver checks the coral reefs of Moorea in French Polynesia during a major bleaching event on May 9, 2019. Credit: Alexis Rosenfeld/Getty Images

Coral Reefs in French Polynesia Are Stuck Between Life and Death

By Ryan Green

Carly Dennison (left) and Jordan Holder from the University of Miami Rosenstiel School prepare to outplant “Flonduran” and Florida elkhorn corals in the Dry Tortugas. Credit: Bailey Marquardt/Coral Reef Futures Lab

Scientists Outplant Experimental ‘Flonduran’ Corals in Florida’s Dry Tortugas National Park

By Teresa Tomassoni

An Unusually Early Heat Wave Breaks Temperature Records Across Western Europe

By Kiley Price

Researchers take samples from a male gray whale on a beach near Moclips, Wash., on April 11. Post-mortem showed cause of death as malnutrition and blunt force trauma, probably from colliding with a boat. Credit: Courtesy of Cascadia Research Collective

Malnourished Gray Whales of the Eastern North Pacific Are in ‘Serious Trouble’

By Blaine Harden

Vishal Prasad, director of Pacific Islands Students Fighting Climate Change, speaks to the media after an International Court of Justice session in The Hague on July 23, 2025. Credit: John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

A Youth-Led Campaign Claims a Win For Climate Justice

By Bob Berwyn

Vanuatu’s Climate Change Minister Ralph Regenvanu attends an International Court of Justice session on July 23, 2025, in The Hague, Netherlands. Credit: John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

U.N. General Assembly Embraces Court Opinion That Says Nations Have a Legal Obligation to Take Climate Action

By Dana Drugmand

Fire in the ‘Galapagos of North America’ Risks Species Found Nowhere Else

By Kiley Price

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