Billions could face temperatures inhospitable to life in the next 50 years, study finds NBC News | 4 years ago
News
Cold Air Rises. What That Means for Earth’s Climate. UC Davis | 4 years ago
Study shows wetter climate is likely to intensify global warming Virginia Institute of Marine Science | 4 years ago
Three billion people will be living in ‘near unlivable’ temperatures by 2070 The Irish Times | 4 years ago
Global warming pushes April temperatures into record territory, as 2020 heads for disquieting milestone The Washington Post | 4 years ago
Greta Thunberg and children's group hit back at attempt to throw out climate case The Guardian | 4 years ago
Experts urge pandemic and climate recovery Theecologist.org | 4 years ago
Green stimulus can repair global economy and climate, study says The Guardian | 4 years ago
3 billion people — up to half the current global population — could be living in unbearable heat in 50 years Business Insider | 4 years ago
One-third of humans ‘to live in deadly hot areas by 2070’, study finds Scmp.com | 4 years ago
Extreme heat to affect more than 3 billion by 2070: study Stuff.co.nz | 4 years ago
Billions projected to suffer nearly unlivable heat in 2070 Inquirer.net | 4 years ago
Rich nations must make pandemic recovery plans green - global investors Reuters | 4 years ago
Rich nations must make pandemic recovery plans green - global investors Reuters | 4 years ago
Best-ever measurement of polar ice loss delivered by NASA space lasers ABC News (AU) | 4 years ago
Due To Covid-19, We Will Witness Record Emission Fall This Year, 7 Times More Since 2008 Crisis The Times of India | 4 years ago
Sliding glaciers 'a new threat' as global warming melts ice Independent | 4 years ago
Only ‘A-list’ of coral reefs found to sustain ecosystems, livelihoods Mongabay Environmental News | 4 years ago
Coronavirus warns the world to forget about easy money and force a climate crisis reckoning Scmp.com | 4 years ago
Our love of the cloud is making a green energy future impossible TechCrunch | 4 years ago
Climate change may push some species to higher elevations—and out of harm's way Phys.org | 4 years ago