News

Extreme Weather Has Had a Surprising Impact on Voters’ Attitudes About Climate Change Disasters don’t shove people toward concern and alarm in the way many researchers expected.
At least 242 million students had their education disrupted last year because of heatwaves, cyclones, floods and other extreme weather events, the United Nations children’s agency has said ...
Extreme weather is causing power grids across the country to fail -- sometimes at massive scales -- putting residents at increased health risk.
At least 242 million children in 85 countries had their schooling interrupted last year because of heat waves, cyclones, flooding and other extreme weather, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said in a ...
Extreme weather events impact everyone, but not in equal ways.
Humidity will soon surge to extreme levels across 40 states. Find out where there will be excessive heat and humidity — and how humidity patterns are changing.
Cuts and disruptions to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration are affecting the nation's weather forecasts, potentially endangering people ahead of extreme weather season.
The weather in the Mohawk Valley is cold enough to send patients with frostbite or hypothermia to local emergency departments, fill up shelters for the homeless and keep kids indoors while they ...
The study shows how global warming can combine with normal variations in the weather to produce decade-long periods of very rapid changes in both extreme temperatures and rainfall.
Extreme weather disrupts schooling for nearly 250 million kids, UNICEF says UN agency says students in 85 countries experienced climate-related disruptions last year.