A peer-reviewed study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences finds that climate change is now lengthening Earth’s days at a rate that could soon exceed the slowing effect of ...
Do people see climate change affecting their area? A median of 74% across nine middle-income countries say global climate change is affecting the area where they live at least somewhat, while 24% say ...
A new climate assessment reveals the Great Lakes region is warming at an accelerated pace, impacting various aspects of the environment and economy. Extreme weather events, including heat waves and ...
World Water Day 2026 focuses on water and gender. Here's how climate change is affecting water resources, from droughts to ...
Climate change has many signals—rising sea levels, melting glaciers, stronger storms—but the first and most immediate sign for most people on the planet is water. Not too much of it. Not too little.
Global temperatures and rain patterns are affected by a climate phenomenon known as El Niño/La Niña.
All over the West, water has become a difficult issue, and a recent Herald article discusses just one of those issues (“Climate change poses challenges for reservoir management,” The Herald, Jan. 26).