Research has long shown that poorly managed disasters foment distrust in institutions.
Researchers are pushing for more aggressive emissions reductions to minimize the threat of concurrent extreme weather events.
"The Day After Tomorrow" imagined a world where a critical ocean current suddenly collapsed. New research says it has rapidly changed in the past.
When environmental hazards strike, the damage is usually counted in numbers: how many people died, how many homes were destroyed, how many people were displaced, and how much money it will take to ...
FEMA estimates that the U.S. loses approximately $5.1 billion in agricultural value each year because of natural hazards — ...
A landmark climate case is being heard by the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights. The request was brought by the Pan ...
In recent years, Americans have been flocking to the Southeastern United States. From Tennessee and the Carolinas, down ...
India, June 7 -- Nepal Prime Minister Balendra Shah has called for stronger cooperation among member states of the Bay of ...
By winter, there's a two out of three chance that the climate pattern will be strong or very strong, increasing the ...
Mauritius is securing climate funding, but weak oversight and poor coordination risk leaving vital adaptation money ...
"Richer, smarter societies made us dramatically safer, proving adaptation and resilience work far better than alarmism suggests." ...