Over one-fifth of the UK may have suitable weather by mid-Century to grow Chardonnay grapes for still wines.
New research by the University of East Anglia highlights the risks of countries relying on nature-based solutions to achieve net-zero.
Industrial-scale injection of gases into geological rock reservoirs is of increasing importance for the energy sector for uses ranging from flushing out remaining fossil fuels to locking away CO2 emissions and preventing them from contributing to climate change.
The El Niño phenomenon influences the weather in distant regions, as far away as the USA, India or the Mediterranean region.
As hurricane Michael churned through the Gulf of Mexico to make landfall near Florida’s Apalachicola River in 2018, it left a sea of destruction in its wake.
A chance find of an unstudied Antarctic sediment core has led University of Otago researchers to flip our understanding of how often ice ages occurred in Antarctica.
One year after Indonesia’s Mount Semeru unleashed a destructive eruption, the tallest and most active volcano on Java erupted again in early December 2022.
For centuries, sailors who had been all over the world knew where the most fearsome storms of all lay in wait: the Southern Hemisphere.
Researchers with the Rutgers Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute have simulated how climate change will affect the distribution of two leading allergens – oak and ragweed pollens – across the contiguous United States.
Rondaxe Lake in Herkimer County, New York, represents classic Adirondack Park waters.
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