Here’s the latest news concerning climate change and biodiversity loss in British Columbia and around the world, from the steps leaders are taking to address the problems to all the up-to-date science.
Weather forecasting is becoming more of a guessing game as climate change shifts the patterns we once relied on. 🌍 It's wild to think how unpredictable our future will be if we don’t take action soon.
Amid controversy over climate-risk disclosure rules, a broad swath of industries faces increasing financial threats as the planet warms.
Policy experts say President Joe Biden can rightly claim to have meaningfully reduced carbon emissions and boosted clean energy. But will those policies last?
Tropical storms like hurricanes are not only terrifying, but also incredibly costly for coastal regions across the United States, Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean. Beyond the immediate devastation,
Polling shows many Americans blame climate change for the disaster.
As the scale of uninsured losses from the Los Angeles wildfires becomes clear, are insurers ready for a climate change-induced ‘new normal’? View on euronews
Meta’s decision could open the floodgates to more climate misinformation on its apps, including misleading or out-of-context claims during disasters.
Researchers have discovered that changes in clouds are slightly mitigating global warming. While greenhouse gases continue to cause temperatures to rise, a reduction in low-cloud cover over land has brought about a modest reduction of the amount of heat being trapped close to ground level.
Homeownership insurance rates will keep going up, experts agree. There are myriad challenges facing the industry.
Temperatures were officially the warmest in recorded history across the globe and in the United States last year. The previous record was set just the year before in 2023, and trends for the future will likely continue to warm.
Hawaii lawmakers began a new legislative session last week with a vow to try to stabilize the state's property insurance market as hurricanes, wildfires and other climate change-influenced disasters at home and elsewhere prompt insurance carriers to raise rates.