News

Models suggest that meeting climate targets will be virtually impossible without steep emissions cuts paired with a huge ...
As fashion’s environmental toll mounts, UNEP is supporting small- and medium-sized textile manufacturers reduce their impact ...
Putting aerosols in the stratosphere to reflect sunlight could prevent the shutdown of key ocean currents, but only if it is ...
Scientists have long insisted that we can and must limit global warming to 1.5 degrees—and some still do, even as that grim ...
Ten years ago, the world committed itself to keeping global warming well below 2°C (and preferably below 1.5°C) above the pre ...
Since 2019, the UK has been committed to the target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Legally binding net zero ...
By Ben Aris in Berlin World leaders must act with “immediate, unprecedented” urgency to prevent cascading climate tipping ...
The purpose of Show Your Stripes Day is to spread awareness about climate change by showing temperature trends over the last 100+ years.
And stripes going back 2,024 years using paleoclimate data show the unprecedented pace and scale of modern climate change compared to fluctuations over millennia.
The updated 'climate stripes' graph now visualizes the impact of climate change on oceans and the atmosphere. Some parts may surprise you.
Scientists just found a way to break through climate apathy In a field of muddy results, it's among the clearest findings that one cognitive scientist has seen in his career.
The stripes show the change in average annual global temperatures since 1850, with red indicating hotter years and blue cooler ones against the average of the period 1971-2000.