Climate change has significantly altered fire regimes worldwide, leading to an increase in the frequency, intensity, and ...
There have always been tensions between developed and developing countries in terms of what is ‘fair’. A new book explains ...
The Making of a Beast’ on living in the Petrocene era in which we are heavily dependent on fossil fuels and the consequences ...
We found if the Earth warms by more than 3°C by the end of the century, the estimated harm to the global economy jumped from ...
Knowing the data, however, by itself, is nowhere near enough. The key to saving the planet has always been climate action, communal action. And in order to move people to action, it is essential that ...
The extent of damage makes it South Korea's largest ever wildfire, after the inferno in April 2000 that scorched 23,913 ...
Globally, Indigenous peoples steward about 20% of the Earth’s land. That land contains 80% of the planet’s remaining ...
The veteran R&B group released 'That's the Way of the World' in March 1975. Here's why the album still matters.
Conservation scientists are challenging the old-school mindset of preserving natural areas in a fixed, untouched state.
The latest update to IUCN red list has 1,300 species of fungi assessed with at least 411 at risk of extinction.
Forests are losing their carbon-absorbing power. Waiting to act will double forest-related climate costs and damage.
Earth may have hit a point of irreversible moisture loss in its soil as a result of climate change, according to a new study. More than 2,614 gigatonnes of moisture was lost from 2000 to 2016.
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