A new study suggests global warming’s effect on GDP has been vastly underestimated. Will it finally break through the religion of infinite growth?
Although they don't impact the surface directly, historical evidence and simulations suggest airbursts can pack a punch.
The Associated Press  A woman cools herself with a fan during a hot day in London, June 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File) ...
The AMOC, crucial for Earth's climate, has remained stable over the past 60 years, per a WHOI study. Advanced methods show no ...
Ammonia, used in fertilizer, is essential to our lives. Addis Energy is trying to make the chemical underground.
A 2023 global heat spike was partly due to reduced sulfate emissions from shipping, which decreased cloud cover and raised ...
The Met Office has issued a red warning ahead of the storm, which is set to bring 100mph gales to parts of the UK within ...
Global climate models show, how the Arctic permafrost will respond to global warming. Researchers at the Max-Planck-Institute ...
Scientists found winds on WASP-127b moving at 33,000 km/h. These are the fastest jetstream winds ever recorded on any planet ...
Jan. 21, 2025 — A new study provides compelling new evidence that a colossal 'megaflood' refilled the Mediterranean Sea, ending a period during which the Med was a vast expanse of salt flats ...
The Sustainable Business Model Challenge is intended to promote innovation by encouraging enterprises to develop sustainable ...
The impact of climate change could drive fixed-asset losses of up to $610 billion per year across listed companies by 2035, ...