Climate, Tipping Point
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23hon MSN
Coral reefs become first environmental system on Earth to pass climate "tipping point," report says
Crucial for marine life and the global economy, coral reefs are the planet's first major environmental system to cross a climate "tipping point" as the world warms.
Empirical research has revolutionized how we understand the global economic impacts of climate change. Recent empirical analyses have tested theoretical ideas, challenged prior estimates, and revealed important and unexpected impacts.
Healthbeat reports climate change is delaying spring in NYC parks, with large parks cooling better than smaller ones as seasons shift.
The link between climate change and mental health is often overlooked. The fact is that the climate phenomenon, more than being merely an environmental challenge, is adding to the mental health crisis.
New research reveals glaciers are steadily losing their battle against the impacts of climate change. Glaciers appear to be resisting the effects of climate change by cooling the air that comes into contact with their icy surfaces.
Floods, droughts, hotter weather and a desert locust invasion — the impacts of climate change are hitting Africa hard, and worse is ahead for the region’s food supplies, economy and health, the U.N. climate agency said on Monday.
An EPFL engineer has illustrated some of the complex ways in which climate change will affect hydropower facilities, taking the Gries dam in Valais Canton as a case study.
Council Member Gabe Johnson announced the Agriculture, Diversification, Environment and Public Transportation Committee will receive three presentations on climate-change impacts in a meeting Thursday, Oct. 9 at 9 a.m. in the Council Chamber and online.
4don MSNOpinion
Climate change is not a ‘con job’
I am not drinking some liberal pro-environment ivory tower Kool-aid about climate change. Instead, it has been my own experiments, which were never focused on climate change, that have been
We must stay resilient and try to change our way of life if we want to stay on the planet that has been our home for thousands of years.
Through their forms of creative expression, the artists brought in topics of sea level rise, unpredictable weather, ancestral knowledge, and what the future of Hawaiʻi could look like. The featured artists are Keisha Tanaka,