We must rethink city planning and development following the LA fires, says UCLA Professor Alex Hall, who advises building homes away from wildlands.
The fires, likely to be the costliest in world history, were made about 35% more likely due to the 1.3°C of global warming that has occurred since preindustrial times.
For more than a century, conservation policy has focused on economic development and wisely using natural resources.
New studies are finding the fingerprints of climate change in the Eaton and Palisades wildfires, which made some of extreme ...
Extreme weather is becoming more destructive as the world warms, but how can we say that climate change intensified the fires ...
Although pieces of the analysis include degrees of uncertainty, researchers said trends show climate change increased the ...
A new study finds that the region's extremely dry and hot conditions were about 35 percent more likely because of climate ...
Extreme conditions helped fuel the fast-moving fires that destroyed thousands of homes. Scientists are working to figure out ...
Human-caused climate change increased the likelihood and intensity of the hot, dry and windy conditions that fanned the ...
President Trump has pledged (again) to take America out of the Paris Agreement and to roll back many Biden administration ...
The mountains and foothills of Los Angeles County are in “extreme drought” conditions, about 36% of the county, explained ...
Climate scientists PolitiFact spoke to disagreed with Trump Jr. and said climate change contributed to the Los Angeles fires’ size and destructiveness. Numerous studies have linked human-caused ...