Find out about the mapping project coming to Fort Wayne this summer that will aim to provide relief to the hottest areas of the city.
As this year's election season fast approaches, electoral officials face the challenge of safeguarding against heat waves.
Learn about a new forecasting tool that combines extreme heat and the human impacts that are experienced.
Increasing atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases (GHGs) are having irreversible consequences for the future of the Earth. However, the general pattern of the impacts of ecological restoration on the three major GHGs on a global scale has not yet been analyzed.
A Fraser Institute study has implicitly called out the Trudeau government, finding that while the 'media and political activists assert that the evidence for increasing harms from increasing extreme weather is iron-clad, it is anything but.'
New report warns people are increasingly at risk in a continent warming
Scorching weather has baked Europe in more days of “extreme heat stress”
A team of geologists and planetary scientists from the California Institute of Technology, the University of California Santa Cruz, New York University, and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center reports evidence that Io's volcanic activity has been ongoing since the beginning of the solar system. In their study, published in the journal Science, the group studied sulfur isotopes in Io's atmosphere to determine how long the moon has been volcanically active.
Coastal communities need to prepare for simultaneous extreme weather events as heat waves increasingly overlap with surges in sea levels due to climate change, a study published on Thursday warned.
EVs could end up using a lot of electricity, but efficiency improvements to support them could significantly reduce the need for new grid infrastructure, cut energy usage, and potentially save consumers billions of dollars, according to a new study from non-profit utility organization EPRI and the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC). By 2050
Of 47,678 public schools nationwide, 5,844 suspended onsite classes yesterday due to extreme heat aggravated by the El Niño phenomenon.
Arkansas summers are hot and humid, and in Little Rock, all the pavement sends temperatures to the top of the thermometer.