A new analysis, using 15 years of autonomous underwater measurements and simulations from the latest global climate models, refined our estimate of future ocean warming and sea level rise.
One of the most popular UK breakfasts is less than friendly to the environment.
Ruckers/Pixabay
Green eggs and bacon anyone? The substitutes you need to make to change your traditional full English into a breakfast which is healthier for the planet – and for you.
The Eurasian beaver is being introduced back into UK landscapes.
Max Pixel
Towering trees in African tropical mountain forests are a vital, overlooked carbon store threatened by deforestation.
A dust storm engulfs a farm in Forbes, NSW. This image won the National Photographic Portrait Prize for 2021.
Joel B. Pratley/National Portrait Gallery,
Greenland’s conditions were once similar to those of a greenhouse. Volcanoes swelled the land, constricted seaways and gigatonnes of greenhouse gases were released into the atmosphere.
The Creek Fire burns near Shaver Lake, Calif., in the Sierra Nevada in September 2020.
AP Photo/Noah Berger
As the pandemic pushes healthcare online, it’s time to stop overlooking the environmental impacts.
July 2021 was Earth’s hottest month on record and was marked by disasters, including extreme storms, floods and wildfires.
Thomas Lohnes via Getty Images
What might sound like small changes – temperatures another tenth of a degree warmer, sea level a few centimeters higher – have big consequences for the world around us.
Academic research can shed light on crucial questions about what life on Earth will be like under the most plausible emissions scenarios. And a warning: the answers are confronting.
IPCC reports are often used as legal tool for bringing the powerful to account. And the more Australia’s governments and businesses lag on climate change, the more litigation we’re likely to see.
The IPCC report has laid out some alarming sea level projections for the future. But the relationship between sea level rise and real-world risk is complex.
A Heat Gradient graphic from the upcoming book Atlas of the Invisible.
Atlas of the Invisible
From the high Yukon to the mountains of Central Asia, melting ice exposes fragile ancient artifacts that tell the story of the past – and provide hints about how to respond to a changing climate.