Secretary Pete Hegseth of the Department of Defense told a CNN reporter that his department focuses on war fighting and training, not "climate change crap."
Researchers have been exploring ocean alkalinity enhancement for the last five years. It's a way to remove carbon from our atmosphere.
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How Climate Change Is Secretly Impacting Your HealthClimate change is often seen as a distant problem, affecting polar bears or coastal cities far away. However, it has a direct impact on our ... Read more The post How Climate Change Is Secretly Impacting Your Health appeared first on weather-fox.
International Women’s Day 2025 comes at a dark time in the struggle for gender equality. As we report in the latest issue of The Ethical Corporation, the new Trump administration’s unprecedented attacks on diversity and inclusion represent a huge setback for women,
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Scientists scorn EPA push to say climate change isn’t a danger, say just look around at the worldAs President Donald Trump's administration looks to reverse a cornerstone finding that climate change endangers human health and welfare, scientists say they need to look around because it’s obvious how bad global warming is and how its getting worse.
As global temperatures continue to rise, similar extreme heat waves in February could occur once every 10 years, according to the study. And if warming doubles by the end of the century, similar heat waves could occur annually. High temperatures are forecast to continue in the region through March.
A new report from Climate Central warns that rising global temperatures are extending allergy season, leading to more pollen and stronger allergic reactions. Warmer weather means fewer freezing days,
Web managers were told to identify, archive or unpublish materials mentioning climate change by "no later than close of business this Friday," according to internal emails obtained by ABC News.
Climate change is already harming people in communities across Rhode Island. In Westerly and Narragansett, homeowners face skyrocketing flood insurance premiums. In Newport, historic sites require multimillion-dollar protections from rising seas.
Most people there make a living tending to vanilla beans but also to crops such as rice, bananas and coffee on small plots of land. They use hand tools such as sickles and shovels and water from springs and rivers to care for their crops, some of which they sell in the market. The rest they keep for their own consumption.
Nearly three-quarters of Baltimore-area residents fear climate change will personally harm them during their lifetime, according to a new survey released Thursday.
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