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Climate Change

Vice President JD Vance (left) and Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin speak to the press outside on recovery efforts from Hurricane Helene in Damascus, Va., in January 2025. Nonprofits in parts of Southwest Virginia devastated by the storm want a restoration of climate resiliency funding terminated by the Trump administration. Credit: Ben Curtis/AFP via Getty Images

Environmental Groups, EPA Spar In Court Over Trump’s Cancellation of Resiliency Funding

By Charles Paullin

Changes in Nature’s Symphony Can Reflect Climate Impacts

By Kiley Price

Wind power makes up 18-20 percent of Sweden's electricity, but many projects are now stopped by municipal or military vetoes, and decreased government subsidies. Credit: Marcus Haraldsson

Sweden, an Early Climate Leader, Is Retreating From Its Environmental Commitments, Part of an EU Trend

By Marcus Haraldsson

Smoke fills the landscape as a wildfire continues to grow on June 10 in Squamish, Canada. Credit: Nav Rahi/AFP via Getty Images

The Tricky Problem of ‘Zombie’ Fires

Interview by Steve Curwood, Living on Earth

Credit: Courtesy of James Bradley

Troubling Scenes From an Arctic in Full-Tilt Crisis

By Matt Simon, Grist

As Climate-Related Wastewater Threats Grow, U.S. and Mexico Sign a Deal to End the Tijuana Sewage Crisis

By Kiley Price

Spanish firefighters stand next to a burning tree during a wildfire in Concepcion, Boliva, on Sept. 24, 2024. Credit: Rodrigo Urzagasti/AFP via Getty Images

Lessons From a Climate Disaster

By Katie Surma

Yuji Iwasawa (center), president of the International Court of Justice, issues the first advisory opinion on States’ legal obligations to address climate change in The Hague on Wednesday. Credit: John Thys/AFP via Getty Images

Governments Are Legally Required to Address Climate Change, Top Global Court Says

By Bob Berwyn, Katie Surma

Burn Scars Can Exacerbate Flooding, Posing Compounding Climate Hazards

By Kiley Price

Members of the Afro-descendant community in mangrove roots in Colombia. Credit: Conservation International

Want To Fight Climate Change? Give Afro-Descendant Communities Land Rights, New Report Says

By Katie Surma

A farmer harvests cocoa beans from the fruit in Ghana on Nov. 21, 2024. Credit: Christina Peters/picture alliance via Getty Images

Weather Extremes Caused by Climate Change Are Driving Up Food Prices, a New Report Says

By Georgina Gustin

People try to stay cool during a heat wave on June 25 in New York City as temperatures hit the high 90s. Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Weeks After a Heat Wave Baked the US, Democrats Push to Declare Heat a Major Disaster

By Kiley Price

A houseboat is docked on Lake Powell in the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, as the critical Colorado River reservoir sits at only a third of its capacity on July 10 in Page, Ariz. Credit: Rebecca Noble/Getty Images

Southwestern Drought Likely to Continue Through 2100, Research Finds

By Wyatt Myskow

A man pushes a gurney covered with a body bag along a sidewalk

30 Years After Chicago’s Deadliest Heat Wave, Systemic Racism Is Still the Root Problem

By Keerti Gopal

As Politicians Quarrel Over Wildfire Smoke, Research on Its Health Impacts Piles Up

By Kiley Price

NASA says it has “no legal obligation” to maintain public access to archives of pre-existing National Climate Assessments. Credit: Celal Gunes/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

NASA Pulls Back From Promise to Host Major Climate Change Reports, Citing Legal Loophole

By Finya Swai

A woman wears a poncho to protect herself from wind-blown rain during a rare spring nor’easter in Boston on May 22. Credit: Craig F. Walker/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

New Research Shows More Extreme Global Warming Impacts Looming for the Northeast

By Bob Berwyn

A man stands with his back to the camera near an American flag at the bank of the river, looking at the damage

As Deadly Floods Hit America, a Meteorologist Looks Ahead

Interview by Aynsley O’Neill, Living on Earth

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