Climate Change Is Forcing Millions of People to Move
Climate migration disproportionately affects developing countries in the Global South, but is also increasingly prevalent in the U.S.
Climate migration disproportionately affects developing countries in the Global South, but is also increasingly prevalent in the U.S.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change summarized tens of thousands of academic papers on climate. Here's what you need to know.
Resource-rich nations show repetitive patterns of governmental and economic malaise. But it may be misleading to attribute a country’s problems to just one factor.
By invoking the Defense Production Act, the U.S. sends a reminder that fossil fuel reliance is a national security risk.
The industry still contends with human rights and geopolitical dilemmas, issues with siting, and more as solar technology scales up.
The report isn't just scary doomsday statistics. In fact, it contains lots of promising advice for ways to make future climate progress.
Experts emphasize helping vulnerable regions of the world adapt to the looming climate impacts that put jobs, cities, and lives at risk.
Could spraying aerosols or launching space mirrors to block out sunlight be part of a climate solution? Experts couldn't be more divided.
The COP26 "Glasgow climate pact" was amended last minute to say phase DOWN coal rather than phase OUT coal. Does this word change matter?
Is the 26th UN Climate Change Conference in Glasgow doomed to fail, or should cynical environmentalists be giving it a chance?