Part three and final part of our Madagascar famine appeal.
Part three and final part of our Madagascar famine appeal.
A new estimate puts the cost of adapting and repairing coastal infrastructure damaged by climate change in the United States at hundreds of billions annually. The sooner adaptation planning begins, the less expensive it will be.
My daughter Sofie was born in April 2021, in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic and in a decade in which climate change is increasingly high on the global agenda. Sofie’s World is a series of articles in which I reflect on parenthood in the context of the climate crisis and what it might be like for her growing up in the era of the Anthropocene.
Second piece of our Madagascar Christmas appeal series.
The world’s first climate famine is on the way in Madagascar. Here’s what you can do to help.
Canada suffers the worst natural disaster in the country’s history.
Major river basins around the world, including the Amazon, may be hot spots for ecological shifts as the planet warms.
The changing climate is already making life insupportable for millions of people. Policymakers at COP26 must prioritise those displaced by disasters and climate change.
Restoration push could help Indonesia meet its climate commitments, but protecting existing mangroves is crucial.
The WMO report highlights increasing extreme weather events due to climate change, with rising costs and decreasing mortality rates, stressing policy improvement.