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Kavya Beheraj/AxiosHot, dry and windy weather that helps wildfires spread is becoming more common across much of the U.S. amid climate change, a new analysis finds.Why it matters: What used to be ...
Luckily with this go around in the short term we have cooler, wetter weather coming. Places like California will undoubtedly ...
Brazil, set to host the COP30 climate conference later this year, lost the largest area of tropical forest in 2024. View on ...
A record 67,000 square kilometres of primary rainforest was lost from the tropics in 2024, with global warming and El Niño ...
Regardless of how fires start, more frequent hot, dry, windy conditions — known as fire weather — prime the landscape for wildfires to ignite and spread. Climate change is causing more ...
Wildfires are common in the state. But scientists say this week’s damaging blazes in a northeastern region are a sign of more ...
It could be another dangerously smoky summer for some in the United States as Canada prepares for a busy wildfire season with ...
Colliding fire seasons in Australia and North America are limiting global support and making wildfire response harder for ...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said it will no longer track the cost of weather disasters, including ...
Arizona once had a well-defined wildfire season that started and ended each year. These days, it's not like that. Here's what ...
Wildfires have always been a fact of life around Los Angeles. But as the planet warms, many places – including Southern California – are experiencing higher temperatures and more intense droughts.