
A new study conducted by researchers from Sweden, Norway and Germany revealed that current rates of plastic emissions globally may already be triggering that we will not be able to reverse.

A new study from researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) revealed the not-so-surprising truth that crops, animals, and people are all prone to heat-related illnesses and death at around the same temperatures. The real surprise is we are already past the safe zone in much of the world.

Scientists at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, have discovered an extract from the leaves of the European chestnut tree has the ability to neutralize dangerous, drug-resistant staph bacteria.

Yesterday temperatures which had soared to 108° F (42.2° C) and more in Seattle and Portland, Oregon began to move further east within the Pacific Northwest. It is now triggering unprecedented incidences of heat stroke and the need for power rationing.

A just published joint research effort by NASA and the Public Health Agency of Canada shows the risks of being infected by tick-borne Lyme disease was up by at least a factor of two since 2000.

The damage caused by CO2 emissions entering the atmosphere cannot be corrected just be removing the same amount of CO2 out of it, by whatever means.

The high temperatures in the American west just keep going higher. They will make the drought even worse and the wildfires to come more widespread and tougher to put out.

According to a new study co-sponsored by NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the rate at which solar radiation is being trapped or absorbed on Earth has increased by a factor of 2 between 2005 and 2019. The climate crisis is accelerating faster than anyone knew.

The United Nations held an all-day event today as a global call to action to restore the world’s lands, as overuse and the climate crisis have already left over 2 billion people without ready access to drinking water, and ecosystems on every continent on their way to ecological destruction.

A Russian emergency services agency reports that major wildfires have broken out in multiple locations in the Siberian north.

Carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere reached yet another record level for the month of May, just short of 419 ppm. It is the highest concentration in the 63 years the data has been recorded.

It should not be a surprise based on empirical observations just over the past year, but researchers now have enough data to prove Arctic sea ice is melting at 2X the rate previously calculated.

The environmental think tank Global Energy Monitor blew the whistle on world’s inability to limit production of power from coal, despite what it will mean to widespread deaths of species on the planet from global heating.

Two citizens of Guyana have filed suit against the Guyana government for what they say is an unconstitutional agreement to let ExxonMobil defile coastal waters and accelerate the climate crisis.

An extensive new study reveals that over one-third of all warm season heat-related deaths from 1991-2018 have as a principal cause increased planetary temperatures as a result of the climate crisis. This is all about to get a great deal worse, fast.

This week French energy giant Total became the latest global target for the Fridays for Future Climate Strikes, when protesters attacked it for human rights violations, greenwashing, and ecocide connected with its destructive fossil fuel projects across Africa.

An activist lawsuit filed by seven environmental and human rights organizations, plus 1,700 Dutch citizens, yesterday landed a massive victory against Netherlands-based Royal Dutch Shell and its grossly inadequate fossil fuel emissions reduction plans.

After record-setting Cyclone Tauktae slammed ashore on May 18, 2021 on the west coast of India, the even more powerful Cyclone Yaas has just made landfall in Odisha on the country’s east coast.

A new short film created in partnership with Greta Thunberg reveals the tight link between our abuse of nature, the pandemic which has paralyzed the world, and the climate crisis which we have allowed to destroy the planet.

Climate scientists and researcher at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory believe it is likely satellite measurements of temperatures in the troposphere, the lowest region of the atmosphere, may have been much lower than reality.

The Group of Seven (G7) nations signed off on an agreement on May 21 that would halt the financing of international coal projects by the end of this year. As with many such initiatives, this one has little “teeth” in it, too many loopholes, and comes way too late to save the planet.

A new research study proves freshwater biodiversity is on its way to a mass extinction event less than one hundred years from now, which even millions of years will not heal.

A new research paper suggests the melting of Greenland’s ice sheet may have already gone far enough that, even if carbon emissions halted immediately, the globe is in for a minimum 3 to 6 feet (several meter) sea level rise because of it.

A new exhaustive study of agricultural pesticide use just proved what biologists had long feared. The chemicals are wiping out invertebrates which form the foundation for all life within and which grows out of the soil.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency yesterday finally took action to eliminate 85% of production or use of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), a chemical still widely used in air conditioning and refrigeration, by 15 years from now. Cutting the use of HFCs will remove one of the most damaging of emissions that contribute to global heating.

Despite the pledges China made at the recent global climate crisis summit to reduce emissions, their doubling down on coal-fired power plant projects reveals their true intent.

Ocean Visions and the College of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Stony Brook University just launched a new pilot program targeting reversing two of the most damaging changes in ocean chemistry caused by global heating.

A new paper has revealed glacier melting tied to global heating has increased by almost 2X in the last 20 years. That puts it way ahead of melting of ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica as a global contributor to sea level rise.

For millennia Bangladesh has kept its agricultural industry alive despite the country's ever-present flooding. A new study suggests the floating gardens solutions it developed to survive might offer a sustainable solution for other parts of the world about to experience regular flooding as mountain glacier melts accelerate.

Two Senators and two House members proposed draft legislation yesterday which would inject $500 billion into the economy to help push public transportation into the post-fossil-fuel era.

The International Energy Agency calculates global oil demand will exceed pre-pandemic levels in just two years, despite warnings it will accelerate the climate crisis further.

A new research project investigating the Amazon Rainforest’s ability to act as a carbon sink discovered something unexpected and seriously disturbing. They figured out the Amazon Basin is already a net carbon emitter and a powerful accelerant to global heating.

The ecosystem's collapse equals economic failure, according to Professor Dasgupta's report.

Climate deniers are citing the brutal wave of sub-freezing weather currently driving areas as south as Houston, Texas, down to temperatures of 26° F (-3° C) and colder as “proof” the climate crisis is a hoax. They could not be more wrong.

The plaintiffs who were just children and teenagers in 2015 when they sued the U.S. government for actively aiding the toxic fossil fuel industry are now taking their case to the Supreme Court.

Rapidly melting glaciers in India’s northern state of Uttarakhand broke apart yesterday, launching a battering ram of water which quickly shattered a dam and flooded the entire region.

A new university study shows global heating and increasing drought will cut available water in Chile by fifty percent only a decade from now.

The Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) just released its annual report on the state of the climate crisis in 2020. It is now tied with 2016 as the hottest year ever recorded.

In just 43 years, the once lush Amazon rainforest ecosystem will collapse completely, leaving most of it dry, barren, and lifeless. That is the conclusion of a just-released research report.

A new study may point to energy sorghum as the logical successor to maize and other annuals as one of the most important food crops for the much hotter future ahead.

14Trees, a LafargeHolcim joint venture with CDC Group, the UK’s publicly owned impact investor, is deploying 3D printing technology at scale to build affordable and low-carbon housing and schools in Africa, starting in Malawi.

As global heating increases worldwide, species from small to large, even including the human race, have already begun a mass migration from lower latitudes or altitudes to further north or further upwards. The implications of those moves will in the long run be significant, both for themselves and for the ecosystems they are invading.

2020 is about to end as a year of catastrophic irreversible change in the Arctic.

On December 3, the Danish government voted to halt all new oil and gas licensing effective immediately. With Denmark the biggest oil and gas provider in all of Europe, this is perhaps the boldest step yet by any nation in agreeing to bring an ultimate halt to fossil fuel use.

Taking its initiative of converting waste into useful resource a step further, the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts has now launched a biogas purification system to recycle food waste into renewable vehicle fuel.

Despite the pandemic having forced drastic cutbacks in greenhouse gas emissions tied to planes, trains, and automobiles, the World Meteorological Organization says 2020 will still end with emissions running at least at 92.5% of normal. So much for extreme measures making any difference.

Overcoming the odds brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, the renewable energy sector is poised to end the year on a high, with renewables accounting for almost 90% of the increase in total global power capacity this year. That growth is expected to continue well into next year.

Newlight, a biotech company has developed a material -- made by microbes -- that converts the potent greenhouse gas methane into ocean-degradable, reusable, regenerative foodware, starting with drinking straws and cutlery.

The Erna Solberg led Norwegian government has proposed to launch a $2.7 billion carbon capture and storage (CCS) project dubbed ‘Longship’ to help the country cut emissions, facilitate the development of new technology and create jobs.

On September 15, total Arctic sea ice hit below 4 million square meters (1.5 million square miles). By next summer there could be zero ice on the waters there.