Showing 457 to 468 of 589 results


Global Temperatures Exceed 1.5°C Limit, Mediterranean a Climate Hotspot
Global average temperatures exceeded the 1.5°C threshold in 2023 and 2024, with 2024 being the warmest year on record since 1850, according to Copernicus, highlighting the Mediterranean as a climate change hotspot experiencing extreme weather events.
Global Temperatures Exceed 1.5°C Limit, Mediterranean a Climate Hotspot
Global average temperatures exceeded the 1.5°C threshold in 2023 and 2024, with 2024 being the warmest year on record since 1850, according to Copernicus, highlighting the Mediterranean as a climate change hotspot experiencing extreme weather events.
Progress
20% Bias Score


Global Temperature Exceeds 1.5°C Limit; Musk's Alleged Plot; California Wildfires; Aoun Elected Lebanon's President
Global average temperature surpassed the 1.5°C limit in 2024, causing widespread extreme weather; Elon Musk allegedly plotted to destabilize the UK Labour Party; California wildfires caused significant destruction and death; Lebanon elected army commander Joseph Aoun as president.
Global Temperature Exceeds 1.5°C Limit; Musk's Alleged Plot; California Wildfires; Aoun Elected Lebanon's President
Global average temperature surpassed the 1.5°C limit in 2024, causing widespread extreme weather; Elon Musk allegedly plotted to destabilize the UK Labour Party; California wildfires caused significant destruction and death; Lebanon elected army commander Joseph Aoun as president.
Progress
28% Bias Score


1.2-Million-Year-Old Antarctic Ice Core Retrieved, Providing Unprecedented Climate Data
A team of scientists retrieved a 1.2-million-year-old ice core from 2.8 kilometers deep in Antarctica's Little Dome C, providing unprecedented data on past climate and atmospheric changes, helping scientists understand the mid-Pleistocene transition and future climate scenarios.
1.2-Million-Year-Old Antarctic Ice Core Retrieved, Providing Unprecedented Climate Data
A team of scientists retrieved a 1.2-million-year-old ice core from 2.8 kilometers deep in Antarctica's Little Dome C, providing unprecedented data on past climate and atmospheric changes, helping scientists understand the mid-Pleistocene transition and future climate scenarios.
Progress
32% Bias Score


Hydroclimate Whiplash: The Cause of Devastating LA Wildfires
A new UCLA study identifies 'hydroclimate whiplash'—rapid swings between intensely wet and dangerously dry weather—as the key factor driving the devastating LA wildfires, resulting in at least five deaths, thousands of destroyed homes, and over 130,000 evacuations.
Hydroclimate Whiplash: The Cause of Devastating LA Wildfires
A new UCLA study identifies 'hydroclimate whiplash'—rapid swings between intensely wet and dangerously dry weather—as the key factor driving the devastating LA wildfires, resulting in at least five deaths, thousands of destroyed homes, and over 130,000 evacuations.
Progress
52% Bias Score


1.2-Million-Year-Old Antarctic Ice Core Retrieved
An international team has drilled a nearly 2.8-kilometer-deep ice core in Antarctica, reaching ice at least 1.2 million years old, to analyze Earth's atmospheric and climate evolution and provide insight into Ice Age cycles and the impact of atmospheric carbon on climate change.
1.2-Million-Year-Old Antarctic Ice Core Retrieved
An international team has drilled a nearly 2.8-kilometer-deep ice core in Antarctica, reaching ice at least 1.2 million years old, to analyze Earth's atmospheric and climate evolution and provide insight into Ice Age cycles and the impact of atmospheric carbon on climate change.
Progress
36% Bias Score


1.2 Million-Year-Old Antarctic Ice Core Retrieved
After a decade of drilling in Antarctica, scientists retrieved a nearly 3-kilometer-long ice core containing ice at least 1.2 million years old, which will be analyzed to understand past atmospheric and climate changes and the evolution of life in extreme environments.
1.2 Million-Year-Old Antarctic Ice Core Retrieved
After a decade of drilling in Antarctica, scientists retrieved a nearly 3-kilometer-long ice core containing ice at least 1.2 million years old, which will be analyzed to understand past atmospheric and climate changes and the evolution of life in extreme environments.
Progress
20% Bias Score

Los Angeles Wildfire Underscores Global Urban Vulnerability to Infernos
Uncontrolled wildfires near Los Angeles have destroyed over 1,000 buildings and claimed at least five lives, highlighting the growing global trend of urban areas facing deadly infernos due to climate change and urban sprawl, which increases the wildland-urban interface (WUI).

Los Angeles Wildfire Underscores Global Urban Vulnerability to Infernos
Uncontrolled wildfires near Los Angeles have destroyed over 1,000 buildings and claimed at least five lives, highlighting the growing global trend of urban areas facing deadly infernos due to climate change and urban sprawl, which increases the wildland-urban interface (WUI).
Progress
32% Bias Score

2024: Hottest Year on Record Exacerbates Climate Change
The Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) confirmed 2024 as the hottest year on record, with temperatures 1.6 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, nearing the 1.5-degree Celsius limit set by the Paris Agreement; this increase led to numerous extreme weather events globally.

2024: Hottest Year on Record Exacerbates Climate Change
The Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) confirmed 2024 as the hottest year on record, with temperatures 1.6 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, nearing the 1.5-degree Celsius limit set by the Paris Agreement; this increase led to numerous extreme weather events globally.
Progress
48% Bias Score

Los Angeles Wildfires Amidst Hottest Year on Record
Devastating wildfires in Los Angeles have claimed at least 10 lives and destroyed over 10,000 structures, coinciding with 2024 being declared the hottest year on record by the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service; studies show a link between rising global temperatures and increased wil...

Los Angeles Wildfires Amidst Hottest Year on Record
Devastating wildfires in Los Angeles have claimed at least 10 lives and destroyed over 10,000 structures, coinciding with 2024 being declared the hottest year on record by the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service; studies show a link between rising global temperatures and increased wil...
Progress
16% Bias Score

Record $320 Billion in Natural Disaster Losses in 2024 Linked to Climate Change
Natural catastrophes caused over $320 billion in global economic losses in 2024, exceeding the average, primarily due to warmer temperatures intensifying storms and floods, as reported by Munich Re.

Record $320 Billion in Natural Disaster Losses in 2024 Linked to Climate Change
Natural catastrophes caused over $320 billion in global economic losses in 2024, exceeding the average, primarily due to warmer temperatures intensifying storms and floods, as reported by Munich Re.
Progress
44% Bias Score

Weak La Niña Delivers Unpredictable US Winter Weather
A weak La Niña climate pattern arrived late in 2025, influencing US winter weather with unusual extremes: heavy rain in Northern California and the Midwest, contrasting with Southern California's dryness and unusually cold temperatures in the South, despite predictions of warmer temperatures in much...

Weak La Niña Delivers Unpredictable US Winter Weather
A weak La Niña climate pattern arrived late in 2025, influencing US winter weather with unusual extremes: heavy rain in Northern California and the Midwest, contrasting with Southern California's dryness and unusually cold temperatures in the South, despite predictions of warmer temperatures in much...
Progress
36% Bias Score

Weak La Niña Impacts US Weather
A weak La Niña climate pattern, arriving late in 2024, is influencing US weather, causing heavy rain in Northern California, drought in Southern California, and increased precipitation in the Midwest, though other weather patterns are inconsistent with typical La Niña effects.

Weak La Niña Impacts US Weather
A weak La Niña climate pattern, arriving late in 2024, is influencing US weather, causing heavy rain in Northern California, drought in Southern California, and increased precipitation in the Midwest, though other weather patterns are inconsistent with typical La Niña effects.
Progress
36% Bias Score
Showing 457 to 468 of 589 results