Americans Connecting the Dots Between Extreme Weather & Climate Change
82 percent of Americans say they have been personally affected by extreme weather.
82 percent of Americans say they have been personally affected by extreme weather.
The program is based on Lester Brown's book series, Plan B: Mobilizing to Save Civilization.
65 percent of Americans want mandatory controls on emissions, but there's still a big partisan divide.
The world remains stuck and climate change proceeds.
A venture between Arnold Schwarzenegger and Connie Hedegaard hopes to ignite action on climate change by helping us visualize a better world instead of simply avoiding a nightmare.
The curriculum, being developed by a coal industry consultant, seeks to confuse teachers and students about the undeniable reality of climate change.
The new map shifts much of the US one zone higher, 5 degrees.
Scientists say they are astonished by the scale and force, never before witnessed in 20 years of surveys.
As in a raft of other reports, Synapse shows the transition can be made through efficiency and renewables, while eliminating coal, and reducing natural gas, nuclear.
The first peer-reviewed study has been published that shows how a large economy can reduce greenhouse gas emissons.