Trump pulls US out of world’s most important climate treaty
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Withdrawing from the world’s premier climate science organization supports the president’s views about global warming.
The recent report released by Energy Secretary Chris Wright on the climate impacts of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the U.S. has caused quite a stir in the climate science arena. “Outrage,” “pushback,” and “criticized” are the words used in ...
Work has been halted on the next National Climate Assessment, according to an email from the Trump administration, dismissing the more than 400 volunteer scientists and scholars who were its co-authors. The Congressionally mandated report, produced roughly ...
Scientists are racing to rescue hundreds of datasets, websites and federal reports that have been deleted by the administration.
Representatives from nearly 200 countries gathered on Monday to work out the details of the next major UN climate science report. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is meeting for a week-long session in Hangzhou, China to negotiate the ...
A group of more than 85 U.S. and international experts publicly rebuked a report from the U.S. Department of Energy that questions the severity of global warming. The federal report is biased, error-ridden and unfit for guiding policy, the researchers said.
Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily. A new Trump administration report that attempts to justify a mass rollback of environmental regulations is chock-full of climate ...
CLIMATEWIRE | A former Trump official who alarmed scientists years ago when he attempted to meddle with a congressionally mandated climate report has returned to the White House in a role that's expected to heavily influence the next version of the assessment.
A new report from the Department of Energy concludes that, yes, the climate is changing and humans contribute to it — but no, it’s not necessarily the impending catastrophe we’ve been warned about. In another era, an agency charting this kind of ...
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Climate extremes in 2025 exposed inequality; millions closer to limits of adaptation: Report
New Delhi, Climate change fuelled extreme weather across the world in 2025, worsening heatwaves, droughts, storms and wildfires and pushing millions close to the "limits of adaptation", according to the World Weather Attribution's annual report.
Opinion
Media continues to ring climate alarm, but 2025 saw the fewest deaths from extreme weather ever
Legacy media outlets rounded out 2025 with articles recounting extreme weather events, presenting the year as one of climate chaos. They aren't reporting that 2025 was likely the year of the fewest deaths from climate-related natural disasters in recorded history.