New research led by the University of East Anglia (UEA) shows how many tropical cities are predicted to warm faster than expected under 2°C of global warming.
By Fedja Grulovic NUUK, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Greenland, the Arctic island coveted by U.S. President Donald Trump, experienced ...
An Arctic farming experiment reveals that carbon losses from peat soils are not fixed, but highly sensitive to how water is ...
The rising global temperatures could endanger the future of the Winter Olympics, even with technological innovations like ...
As Australia has just sizzled through its hottest heatwave since Black Saturday in 2009, the world turns its attention to the ...
Greenland, the Arctic island once coveted by Donald Trump, has recorded its warmest January on record, with temperatures rising at a rate four times faster than the global average. At such a critical ...
For decades, global temperature averages have been the yardstick by which we measure our planet's fever. Leaders gather at ...
At the same time, Washington's shift in its European policy has placed transatlantic relations under the most severe test ...
Winter Storm Fern, which brought 14 inches of snow to Cornell's campus, was driven by Arctic air interacting with a low-pressure system and raises questions about the impact of climate change on ...
A new study out in the journal Science Advances finds that chronic exposure to wildfire smoke has contributed to tens of ...
Concentrations of a forever chemical known as TFA is increasing in rainwater, drinking water, soil and plants.
Taller buildings get a bad rap. New research from U of T Engineering’s Centre for the Sustainable Built Environment (CSBE) has found that while adding height does slightly increase embodied emissions, ...