A new report says that if the Earth keeps emitting CO2 at this pace, global warming is expected to reach 1.5 degrees Celsius within a decade.
Author: Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY
Greta Thunberg won’t be at this massive climate change summit, but Biden will be. What to know about COP27.
More than 35,000 people from around the world are expected to be in Egypt for COP27, the annual U.N. Climate Change Conference.
Something surprising can cause electric vehicles to catch on fire. Here’s what experts want you to know.
Flood waters present a unique danger to electric cars, but data shows fires are far more common in gas vehicles.
Climate change is on the ballot in the midterm elections: Here’s what’s at stake.
Democrats have set up several major climate change initiatives at the national level that Republicans would like to roll back. What to know.
California wildfires wiped out nearly 20 years of greenhouse gas emission reductions – in 2020, alone
California’s 2020 wildfires produced twice as much greenhouse gas emissions as the state’s reductions in such pollutants since 2003, a new study says.
Speed limits in the ocean? Massive ships are killing endangered whales each year.
How many whales die each year? It’s more than 80 in this stretch of Pacific Ocean where freight ships wreak havoc on the whale population.
Massive wind turbines are coming to a coast near you. Will Biden’s ‘audacious’ goal pay off?
Experts say Biden’s announcement to invest nearly $50 million in offshore wind power can move the nation to the forefront of cutting edge technology.
‘Shouting distance’: That’s how close the Inflation Reduction Act would get US to its climate goals
The proposed Inflation Reduction Act could get the United States within “shouting distance” of its climate goals for 2030, analysis shows.
Remote, stealth commands tamper with temperatures in Portland area homes — all to save energy
In voluntary energy shifting programs, customers grant their utility the right to slightly lower their usage in return for a credit on their bills.
Climate change exposes growing gap between weather we’ve planned for — and what’s coming
Rising temperatures and wildfire in the West changing faster than models and projections can keep up