The world has seen faster climate change than expected since the Paris Agreement a decade ago. Scientists say Earth's warming ...
Ten years after nearly every nation on the planet signed the historic Paris Agreement, a new United Nations report warns that ...
A decade since the deal was adopted, climate experts say it is working to cut emissions, spur action and reduce the projected ...
Exceeding the emissions threshold by 2026 is likely, making a post-1.5°C world inevitable. Governments face some hard choices ...
Heat waves, extreme drought and deadly wildfire smoke are just some of the climate-related health hazards that have reached record levels of harm, according to the latest report from a global ...
How do we think about the climate future, now that the era marked by the Paris Agreement has so utterly disappeared? Credit...Photo illustration by Lola Dupre Supported by By David Wallace-Wells Ten ...
As fossil fuel production surges, health experts warn that climate change is becoming a growing public health emergency. In the lead-up to COP30, more than 230 organizations and individuals signed an ...
The Adaptation Gap Report highlights a widening divide between climate adaptation needs and available financing, driven by a notable slowdown in the adoption of cost-efficient green technologies.
The global struggle against climate change has reached a devastating moment. The United Nations warns that 2025 will rank as one of the hottest years ever recorded, threatening “irreversible damage”.