News

The world again registered its hottest day on record on Monday, July 22, inching past Sunday which had just taken the title, according to preliminary data from a European Union monitoring agency.
LONDON >> The world again registered its hottest day on record on Monday, inching past the previous high recorded just 24 hours earlier on Sunday, according to preliminary data from a European ...
There’s a good chance that when the data come in for Tuesday, it will be three straight days of global record-breaking heat, said Carlo Buontempo, the director of the European climate service ...
It was the hottest day on Earth since at least 1940, according to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. The previous record was set last July, coming in at 17.08 degrees Celsius.
A TEACHER has broken the world record for the fastest time to crawl 100 metres. Tom Dalton, 31, was cheered on by a crowd of friends, family, colleagues and school pupils, who gathered at Nunnery Wood ...
Scientists warn staging tournaments during the Northern Hemisphere’s summer is getting more dangerous for players and ...
The Labour Ministry announced that outdoor manual labour and food delivery services must pause operations between 12:00 pm ...
A sweltering heat wave sent temperatures soaring above 100 degrees across much of Europe, causing schools and landmarks to ...
LONDON (Reuters) - The world again registered its hottest day on record on Monday, July 22, inching past Sunday which had just taken the title, according to preliminary data from a European Union ...
Driven by oceans that won't cool down, an unseasonably warm Antarctica and worsening climate change, Earth's record hot streak dialed up this week, making Sunday, then Monday, the hottest days ...
Driven by oceans that won't cool down, an unseasonably warm Antarctica and worsening climate change, Earth's record hot streak dialed up this week, making Sunday, then Monday, the hottest days ...
Monday was recorded as the hottest day ever globally, beating a record set the day before, as countries around the world from Japan to Bolivia to the United States continue to feel the heat ...