News

Most Americans fear extreme weather is getting worse, a new USA TODAY/Ipsos Poll finds, a concern underscored by the rising ...
The decision by the Department of Defense to stop providing data to NOAA is just the latest challenge for the agency this year.
Still, claims of weather-control technology, once confined to relatively fringe circles, have gained some traction in the ...
Millions of Americans are living under extreme heat warnings and advisories this week, as some fear staff and funding cuts under the Trump administration could set back the federal response ...
Its discontinuation is another Trump-administration blow to the public’s view into how fossil fuel pollution is changing the world around them and making extreme weather more costly.
Extreme weather events like tornadoes can happen in minutes, but the effect of these disasters have on the community can be long-lasting.
Before 2021, the typically temperate Pacific Northwest and western Canada seemed highly unlikely to get a killer heat wave, ...
A new ad campaign is asks the public to refer to climate events as "unnatural disasters," part of a linguistic shift to garner attention on extreme weather.
Extreme weather is now a common part of American life — and the associated health risks are impossible to ignore. Unless you’re the Trump administration.
“Without the warnings of extreme weather events, hurricanes, tsunamis, people will die,” Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen said at a Friday news conference, “and others will suffer greatly ...
A coalition of service agencies is pressing the city to reform its plan before winter, arguing that the health and safety risks to Chicago’s unhoused population during days of extreme cold, heat ...
Extreme weather in 2024 affected around 18 in every 1,000 people across the globe, according to preliminary figures from the International Disaster Database. Mongabay has compiled the data into an ...