Morning Overview on MSN
Study finds global warming is already affecting daily life worldwide
Global warming has picked up speed over the past decade, and the consequences are no longer confined to glaciers or distant ...
As a grueling March heat wave batters the U.S. West with dangerous temperatures, and the world girds itself for what could be another sizzling record-smashing Super El Niño, a team of researchers has ...
If you liked this story, share it with other people. Climate change is affecting global wind patterns in multiple ways, many of which have direct implications for human health. Worsening sand and dust ...
Live Science on MSN
Extreme wildfires, droughts and storms could happen even under moderate global warming, study finds
New research suggests devastating climate outcomes that are typically associated with extreme global warming could hit even ...
This year’s report confirms that 2025 was one of the hottest years ever recorded, extending an 11‑year streak of record ...
Climate change in Earth's polar regions is emerging as an underrecognized driver of global health risks, with consequences reaching far beyond the Arctic and Antarctic, researchers argue. A study by ...
For the United States to address the global health risks posed by accelerating climate change, it will need to reframe climate adaptation as a pragmatic policy that can bridge partisan divides and ...
Global warming has picked up speed in the past decade, according to a new analysis from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). By removing short term natural influences such as El ...
Despite rapid progress in clean energy and electric vehicles, the world is still warming faster than ever. The good news is that we already have powerful ways to reduce the warming rate – if ...
Morning Overview on MSN
China’s air pollution cuts may be accelerating Arctic warming, study says
China’s campaign to clean its skies has delivered measurable health benefits for hundreds of millions of people, but a ...
Can new regulations requiring corporations to disclose harmful practices lead to improvements in the health of the public? A study by researchers from Yale and CUNY says yes. Heavy smoke from ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results