Use and share Climate Central’s latest resources covering key facts about the causes and impacts of climate change, as well ...
Dr. Zachary Labe, climate scientist at Climate Central, said: "Unsurprisingly, September brought another record-breaking month of climate change-fueled heat across North America. A Canadian weather ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. This warming stripes graphic illustrates changes in global average temperatures since 1850, with blue representing cooler years ...
Dr. Zachary Labe, climate scientist at Climate Central, said: “Winter isn’t gone – it’s changing. It can still get dangerously cold, but there are fewer freezing nights over time. Cold outbreaks still ...
The first half of this year was the costliest ever recorded for weather and climate disasters in the United States, according to an analysis published Wednesday by the nonprofit organization Climate ...
Air pollution is the leading environmental health threat to people worldwide. According to the World Health Organization, outdoor air pollution causes over 4 million premature deaths each year — ...
Meteorological winter, as defined by weather organizations like NOAA, runs from December 1 through the last day of ...
A new analysis from a U.S. based nonprofit organization is looking into the long term viability of outdoor winter sports at the Olympics. Researchers at Climate Central found in the 70 years since ...
A gull lands on a dune in South Mission Beach as the sun sets. (Photo by Thomas Melville/Beach & Bay Press) This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news ...
Dr. Zachary Labe, climate scientist at Climate Central, said: “Record heat across both polar regions this October is yet another reminder that the impacts of human-caused climate change reach every ...
Kaitlyn Trudeau, senior research associate at Climate Central, said: “When the three hottest years in 176 years are the last three we lived through, it’s clear we’ve shifted the baseline of our planet ...