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The United Nations announced an ambitious plan to establish early warning networks in regions increasingly vulnerable to extreme weather fueled by climate change in five years.
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New Orleans-area residents — still recovering from Hurricanes Ida, Laura, Zeta, and Katrina — are picking up the pieces after a raft of tornadoes tore through the area Tuesday night, killing at least one person.
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Climate science at a glanceClimate change has increased wildfire risk in much of the U.S.
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Simultaneous heatwaves in the Arctic, with temperatures 50°F warmer than average, and the Antarctic, 70°F warmer than average, are the polar bookends around a planet of wild, warming weather.
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The megadrought plaguing the western U.S. will likely continue as high heat and dry conditions reciprocally exacerbate each other, NOAA predicted in its spring seasonal outlook Thursday.
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Pollen levels could triple in some places as the world warms, and allergy season will start more than a month earlier and be far more intense, new research shows. Pollen season in the U.S. used to start around St.
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Climate Signals summary: The drought in the Western United States, worsened by human-caused climate change due to the burning of fossil fuels, is causing the second largest reservoir on the Colorado River to d
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Climate Signals summary: Human-caused climate change due to the burning of fossil fuels is increasing drought risk which disproportionately impacts the most vulnerable communities, such as those in Somalia who
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Multiple wildfires are blazing across the Florida Panhandle, burning thousands of acres, forcing evacuations, and incinerating homes. The largest, the Bertha Swamp Road Fire, has burned more than 14,000 acres.
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Half a million Australians are under some level of evacuation order as catastrophic floods continue to deluge huge swaths of eastern Australia with more rain to come.
