While advanced economies still consume most of the world’s total electricity, emerging and developing economies, led by China, are expected to account for 85% of global demand growth through 2027.
The world warmed to yet another monthly heat record in January, despite an abnormally chilly United States, a cooling La Nina and predictions of a slightly less hot 2025, according to reports.
According to all climate metrics, 2024 was a terrifying year. It was so hot that it led to a declaration by the UN that we ...
Record-Breaking Heat in January 2025 Leaves Scientists Alarmed and Searching for Answers Last month, the world experienced ...
Roman Vilfand noted another anomaly - in the Antarctica, at the South Pole, where the ice area is 5% below average ...
The planet has been shattering heat records for the past two years. That was expected to ease in January — and the fact that ...
January 2025 was the warmest on record when considering the global average. The European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change ...
Residents across the eastern and southern United States shivered last month as multiple Arctic fronts brought record-low temperatures and rare snow to the Gulf Coast. The numbers are in, and NOAA says ...
The Lower 48 stood out as one of the few colder spots in overall global warmth. Here's the newly-released perspective.
Last month set a new record for the hottest January ever documented, surprising climate experts who expected heat to ease up due to La Niña.
Entering 2025 with the influence of La Niña, last month unexpectedly was recorded as the hottest January on record, according ...