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6 votes
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Tree ring records show increase in extreme weather in South America
4 votes -
CO2 in Earth's atmosphere nearing levels of fifteen million years ago
5 votes -
Climate change may cause extreme waves in the Arctic
5 votes -
Spreading rock dust on the ground could pull carbon from the air, researchers say
14 votes -
Greta Thunberg, the climate campaigner who doesn't like campaigning
4 votes -
In nearly every part of the world, heatwaves have been increasing in frequency and duration since the 1950s
14 votes -
Risk of 40°C/104°F heat in the UK ‘rapidly increasing’, says Met Office—a temperature never before recorded in the UK could possibly occur as frequently as once every 3.5 years by 2100
11 votes -
Siberian wildfires swell amid historic heatwave, as highs of 38°C reported north of the arctic circle
8 votes -
Climate change: The South Pole feels the heat, as warming over the Antarctic continent took place at three times the global rate since 1989
5 votes -
Why locusts are descending on East Africa
4 votes -
Elegy for a country's seasons [2014]
4 votes -
Bill Gates-backed carbon capture plant does the work of forty million trees
6 votes -
Overconsumption and growth economy key drivers of environmental crises
7 votes -
Hottest Arctic temperature record probably set with 100°F/37°C reading in Siberia
9 votes -
Greta Thunberg has hope for climate, despite leaders' inaction
7 votes -
Vatican urges Catholics to drop investments in fossil fuels, arms
14 votes -
Millions of abandoned oil wells are leaking methane, a climate menace
7 votes -
Climate worst-case scenarios may not go far enough, cloud data shows
7 votes -
Has your local climate gotten noticeably warmer in your lifetime?
I was just thinking, it does seem that where I am summers and winters are hotter than they used to be (I'm in the northern Midwestern US). Actually this winter we had a few days where it got over...
I was just thinking, it does seem that where I am summers and winters are hotter than they used to be (I'm in the northern Midwestern US). Actually this winter we had a few days where it got over 60 degrees(!) and I do feel like it snows less than when I was a kid. But I've only been alive for less than 2 decades and I don't think the global temperature has actually risen a lot in that time? So I'm curious, has anyone else personally felt the affects of climate change in their own climate? And if so, since when?
edit: I also remember seeing lots of fireflies when I was younger. Haven't seen one in years.
24 votes -
Jet stream: Is climate change causing more ‘blocking’ weather events?
5 votes -
Denmark should end all future oil and gas exploration in the North Sea – it hurts Denmark's ambition as a front-runner in the fight against climate change
6 votes -
Microplastic pollution in oceans vastly underestimated - study: Particles may outnumber zooplankton, which underpin marine life and regulate climate
6 votes -
Climate explained: Why we need to focus on increased consumption as much as population growth
6 votes -
Making life cheap: Population control, herd immunity, and other anti-humanist fables
6 votes -
Why carbon pricing is not sufficient to mitigate climate change—and how “sustainability transition policy” can help
7 votes -
Coal industry will never recover after coronavirus pandemic, say experts
24 votes -
Biden names Ocasio-Cortez, Kerry to lead his climate task force, bridging Democrats’ divide
13 votes -
The food to avoid if you care about climate change
7 votes -
2000-2010 drought in Upper Missouri River Basin driest in 1,200 years
7 votes -
Climate change and coronavirus: Five charts about the biggest carbon crash
12 votes -
In Helsinki's climate plan, community comes before bureaucracy
5 votes -
When the flames go out, the Permian’s methane problem worsens
4 votes -
Michael Moore’s environment film a slap in the face on Earth Day
17 votes -
Can someone ELI5 arctic tipping points or how close we are to runaway climate change?
As the various Arctic climate feedbacks show, we are fast approaching the stage when climate change will be playing the tune for us while we stand by and watch helplessly, with our reductions in...
As the various Arctic climate feedbacks show, we are fast approaching the stage when climate change will be playing the tune for us while we stand by and watch helplessly, with our reductions in CO2 emissions having no effect in the face of, say, runaway emissions of methane.
from this article: https://e360.yale.edu/features/as_arctic_ocean_ice_disappears_global_climate_impacts_intensify_wadhams
13 votes -
Norway has come under fire from environmental groups who accuse it of caving to oil companies over a decision to shift an Arctic no-go zone
5 votes -
Planet of the Humans
4 votes -
‘Human beings have overrun the world’: David Attenborough calls for an end to waste in impassioned plea to address climate change
10 votes -
Fairytales of Growth
4 votes -
Eleven percent rise in threatened Swedish species over the past five years, according to the latest report from SLU, the Swedish Species Information Centre
5 votes -
Scientists confirm dramatic melting of Greenland ice sheet – loss largely due to high pressure zone not taken into account by climate models
5 votes -
Sweden's climate solution is now the Sámi people's problem – winters are becoming warmer and climate change is making conditions for the reindeer unsafe
5 votes -
Cultivating biodiversity at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
6 votes -
A major scorecard gives the health of Australia’s environment less than one out of ten
3 votes -
How long do we have left, exactly, until climate change affects our global food supply?
I'm not very knowledgeable about this stuff. How long do we have left, like, 10-15 years at the most?
6 votes -
Greenland's melting ice raised global sea level by 2.2mm in two months – analysis of satellite data reveals astounding loss of 600bn tons of ice last summer
7 votes -
Coronavirus has temporarily reduced China’s CO2 emissions by a quarter
18 votes -
Greenland glacier collapse – a new study combining historical photos with evidence from ocean sediments suggests climate change was already at work in the 1930s
8 votes -
Why we panic about the coronavirus but not about the climate crisis
17 votes -
Greta Thunberg calls for digital strikes amid coronavirus fears – urging fellow climate campaigners to avoid mass protests and listen to local authorities
10 votes