Earth’s Hottest Days Ever
Twice this week, global temperatures broke records, but scientists are more concerned about a longer-term pattern of hotter weather.
By David Gelles
Twice this week, global temperatures broke records, but scientists are more concerned about a longer-term pattern of hotter weather.
By David Gelles
If elected to the White House, Vice President Harris will face the challenge of implementing President Biden’s signature climate policies.
By Manuela Andreoni
She played a crucial role in fixing the ozone hole, and has thoughts on climate change.
By Cara Buckley
Here’s where the party stands on global warming, energy and the environment.
By Manuela Andreoni
The soaring electricity demands of data centers and A.I. are straining the grid in some areas, pushing up emissions and slowing the energy transition.
By David Gelles
Climate change and widely varied state regulations could mean you’re paying too much or far too little to insure your home.
By Christopher Flavelle
Here’s how the end of the Chevron doctrine could affect climate regulation.
By David Gelles and Manuela Andreoni
Ahead of the first presidential debate, we examined the climate stakes in this year’s election.
By Manuela Andreoni
A lack of affordable housing and high energy costs are making Americans more vulnerable to record-breaking heat, public health experts say.
By Manuela Andreoni
On-air meteorologists have become a target in the culture wars as they report on the effects of climate change.
By David Gelles
Researchers have found that longer-lasting heat waves can be deadlier and can pose unique health risks.
By Raymond Zhong
The Supreme Court may soon decide the fate of dozens of cases brought by cities and states that seek to hold fossil fuel companies accountable.
By David Gelles
Record-breaking temperatures are pushing experts and public health officials to come up with a new vocabulary to warn the public about extreme heat.
By Austyn Gaffney
Hundreds of millions of people around the world have recently voted in elections with important climate issues like extreme heat and coal dependence.
By Manuela Andreoni
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The struggle of the world’s largest source of renewable last year could have important implications for the fight against climate change.
By Manuela Andreoni
Global carbon dioxide emissions might have already peaked, according to new estimates, signaling a potentially monumental shift.
By David Gelles
Carbon offsets have been heavily criticized as greenwashing, but they have a hidden benefit: getting crucial climate funds to developing nations.
By Manuela Andreoni
The president’s signature 2022 climate law has sparked a rapid clean energy boom but its political impact is a lot less clear.
By David Gelles
India is adapting to a new era of dangerous heat, even as climbing temperatures are making its transition to a cleaner economy more difficult.
By Manuela Andreoni
The Biden administration is betting that new China tariffs will be politically popular, even if they could slow the transition from fossil fuels.
By Jim Tankersley and David Gelles
Across the country, more intense heat, storms and fires are causing the home insurance market to start to buckle.
By Christopher Flavelle
How to reconcile two new reports that seem to tell very different stories about the state of climate change.
By David Gelles
Experts say that a new wave of electric vehicle charging stations are coming soon, even after Tesla gutted its charger team.
By Manuela Andreoni
New guidelines attempt to make the aviation cleaner by relying on corn-based ethanol, but experts divided on the fuel’s environmental benefits.
By Manuela Andreoni
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How a group of local activists saved the ‘Yosemite of South America’ in the unlikeliest of deals.
By David Gelles
As countries negotiate a landmark agreement to reduce plastic pollution, the industry is fighting a battle over regulations and over its image.
By Hiroko Tabuchi
Introducing Ask NYT Climate, where we’ll explore how climate intersects with your everyday life.
By Ryan McCarthy
It’s still unclear how the world will pay for developing nations to fight climate change.
By David Gelles and Manuela Andreoni
And what would that mean for the climate?
DAVID GELLES
The fate of Colombia’s rainforest may lay in the hands of a rebel group linked to drugs and illegal mining.
By Manuela Andreoni
Why atmospheric concentrations hit record levels last year.
By David Gelles
The surprising carbon footprint of an Amtrak trip across America.
By Hiroko Tabuchi
A new Vermont bill would create a “climate superfund.”
By Manuela Andreoni
A tax on ship emissions could have an impact on almost everything we buy
By Manuela Andreoni and Max Bearak
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The ubiquitous ingredient contributes to the loss of tropical forests.
By Manuela Andreoni
E.V.s have become part of the political culture wars
By David Gelles
A new book argues that short-term profit incentives can deliver long-term changes to benefit the climate.
By David Gelles
Climate is not the only aspect of the natural world that is being transformed by human activity.
By Manuela Andreoni
Adam Met wants to make it easier to build wind and solar projects.
By David Gelles
The president’s campaign is eager to tell the story of his first term’s accomplishments.
By Manuela Andreoni
The S.E.C. was the target of intense corporate lobbying and a backlash from Republicans.
By David Gelles
Agriculture is a big contributor to climate change — is there a path to reinvention?
By Manuela Andreoni
“It’s like an omen of the future.”
By David Gelles
We explore some of the patterns investors track to help understand what they show.
By Manuela Andreoni
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Political and legal risks are mounting for banks and asset managers.
By David Gelles
Complex environmental systems are undergoing profound upheavals as a result of human activity.
By David Gelles and Manuela Andreoni
Clean power, melting glaciers and carbon capture.
By David Gelles
This week’s atmospheric rivers may only be the beginning.
By Manuela Andreoni
The Biden administration will examine how a natural gas mega-project will impact the climate.
By David Gelles
“Every vote matters, more this year than perhaps any time in history.”
By David Gelles
“Yeah, the world is going to end, but I’m still going to vacation.”
By David Gelles
About half of the world’s population will be electing leaders this year.
By Manuela Andreoni
Azerbaijan is where the petroleum era began.
By Manuela Andreoni
Scientists are asking whether the planet’s warming is accelerating.
By Manuela Andreoni
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“A visceral feeling of what climate change looks and feels like.”
By David Gelles
We’re watching these developments in the year to come.
By David Gelles
TV shows, movies, books, art exhibits and pop music about our rapidly warming planet.
By David Gelles and Manuela Andreoni
It’s the season of buying more than we need, and then throwing it away.
By Manuela Andreoni
Ecosystems scored a win at the climate talks in Dubai.
By Manuela Andreoni
An unlikely breakthrough on fossil fuels at COP28
By David Gelles
Negotiators are working through the night to reach a deal.
By David Gelles
A fierce debate at the global climate talks.
By Manuela Andreoni
Community-based programs could lose funding under the mayor’s proposal.
By Hiroko Tabuchi
The United Arab Emirates, one of the world’s biggest oil producers, is hosting this year’s climate summit.
By David Gelles
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The world has always experienced fire year-round, but these are a lot harder to ignore.
By Manuela Andreoni
It could deliver a jolt of ambition ahead of the global talks.
By David Gelles
The senator has played an outsize role in shaping climate policy.
By David Gelles
An alarming picture of planned fossil fuel production before the global climate talks.
By David Gelles and Manuela Andreoni
Tensions between rich and poor countries are on display.
By David Gelles
As we clean up the air, we also seem to making warming a bit worse.
By David Gelles
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