Stalled Hurricanes Could Grow More Common
5:51 | In a warming climate, hurricanes could linger longer, causing extreme rainfall and wind damage.
5:51 | In a warming climate, hurricanes could linger longer, causing extreme rainfall and wind damage.
6:43 | Dry graphs and science jargon don’t cut it with most audiences. Here are 4 scientists – each with a different approach to creative, fun, insightful climate communication.
6:14 | Some innovative nuclear technologies seem promising, but they won’t be ready for widespread deployment anytime soon.
6:53 | Examining short- and long-term risks of global warming methane “time bomb”. Scientists explain the evidence.
4:36 | Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity is the measure of how much the planet will warm in response to a given amount of Greenhouse gas pollution.
8:40 | Scientists Sara Myhre and Jeffrey Kiehl discuss the emotional impacts of climate change.
9:10 | Scientists analyze global sea level rise.
7:34 | Jerry Taylor for more than two decades was a leading spokesperson against concerns expressed by the climate science community and, accordingly, against taking action on greenhouse gases. All that has changed.
5:47 | Researcher John Cook’s analysis showed overwhelming consensus among climate scientists. Here’s how the 97% ‘concensus’ meme came to be.
7:09 | Climate models have a strong record in helping scientists foresee a warmer world … and its impacts.
6:55 | Journalists and scientists weigh in on the Paris Climate Change agreement of 2015.
9:24 | Scientists at Exxon Oil Corporation conducted research on climate change and the greenhouse effect in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
6:49 | In anticipating Pope Francis’ encyclical on climate change, catholics, protestants, scientists, and lay people discuss the ethics and spiritual meaning of climate action.
8:12 | Based on the book by Naomi Oreskes and Eric Conway, the film follows the development of sophisticated methods for distorting science.
7:20 | Suggestions that modest increases in sea ice around Antarctica offset significant losses in Arctic sea ice are based on a bogus “apples and oranges” comparison.