Al Roker talks to climate scientist Alexander Gershunov about the conditions that made the L.A. wildfires so devastating.
The fast-growing field began two decades ago and is now firmly established, but it is still sometimes hampered by a lack of ...
Environmental critics claim "alarmist" research group that blamed LA wildfires on climate change in a non-peer reviewed study has "no scientific foundation." ...
Extreme weather is becoming more destructive as the world warms, but how can we say that climate change intensified the fires in Los Angeles, typhoons in the Philippines, or flooding in Spain? That ...
Attribution science — linking cause and effect — involves statistical methods and climate models to identify the human influence on particular weather events and long-term climate patterns. It allows ...
A quick scientific study finds that human-caused climate change increased the likelihood and intensity of the hot, dry and windy conditions that fanned the flames of the recent devastating Southern Ca ...
Temperatures in the Coral Sea have been 1-2 degrees warmer than average. The adjoining coastline has just seen 1-1.5 metres ...
An Imperial wildfires expert is also warning that following the fires, toxic fumes are now a concern in Los Angeles.The fires broke out around LA on 7 ...
On Tuesday, researchers with World Weather Attribution published a report that found climate change had increased the likelihood of a wildfire disaster in the highly-exposed Los Angeles area ...
LOS ANGELES, CA – A new report from the World Weather Attribution group found that climate change made the conditions leading to recent Southern California wildfires 35% more likely.