News
With high levels of pollution and warming, future summers in 247 U.S. cities would feel like an entirely different part of the country — or the world — by 2100.
Devastating flash floods across the Hill Country in central Texas on July 4 to 7, 2025 left a trail of destruction claiming over 80 lives with more still unaccounted for. As climate change drives ...
Listen to a conversation between climate and weather experts as we break down the meteorology behind the deadly floods in Texas in July 2025, the role of climate change, and the critical ...
Dangerous heat will impact the Western U.S. between July 8-11. Human-caused climate change will make this extreme heat at least three times more likely for around 43 million people and five times ...
With wildfires raging after the hottest and driest summer on record in Texas, scientists weigh in on the climate change connections.
America’s capacity to generate carbon-free energy from solar and wind power grew in 2022. New analysis of Climate Central’s WeatherPower™ data shows how much and where.
The global temperature data is in and signs of climate change could not be clearer—2020 was one of the two warmest years on record.
Extreme weather events fueled by climate change bring health risks—including from damp, moldy homes after storms and floods.
New Climate Central analysis shows where urban heat is most intense in 65 major cities that account for 15% of the U.S. population.
Unusually warm ocean temperatures contributed to Hurricane Beryl's rapid intensification.
The U.S. has already experienced 15 billion-dollar disasters in 2022—well above the annual average, reflecting the long-term rise in the frequency of such devastating events.
Coastal Risk Finder, Climate Central’s new interactive map resource, shows who’s at risk from worsening coastal floods driven by rising seas in the U.S. — and what’s being done to adapt.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results