News

Researchers agree that climate change has made torrential downpours more frequent—but the science gets murky when examining ...
Norfolk’s treasured Chrysler Museum of Art resides in a constant vulnerability due to the threat of rising waters from ...
In the wake of the flooding disasters in Texas, a number of leftists made inflammatory remarks on social media, celebrating ...
The state is home to 84 billionaires, including the world’s richest man, yet officials refuse to fund the social ...
When the documentary "Trouble the Water," a New Orleans-based film about Hurricane Katrina, was nominated for an Oscar in ...
Warming ocean temperatures and warmer air mean there’s more water vapor in the atmosphere to fuel extreme downpours like ...
A national poll reveals that 86% of Americans link record-breaking heat waves to climate change and are concerned about the ...
America’s endless natural-disaster blame game is thwarting answers to life-and-death questions over worsening extreme weather ...
When Hurricane Milton formed, it met with waters "as warm as a hot tub". As the world continues to burn fossil fuels and ocean temperatures climb, cyclonic storms feed off the heat and become ...
The warming climate boosted Helene's wind speeds by about 20.92 kilometers per hour, and made the high sea temperatures that fueled the storm 200 to 500 times more likely.
The devastation caused by Hurricane Helene has brought climate change to the forefront of the presidential campaign for the first time.
The focus on the storm — and its link to climate change — was notable after climate change was only lightly mentioned in two presidential debates this year.