How new plans to tackle climate change will impact Texas
The White House's National Climate Advisor Gina McCarthy spoke with FOX 4’s Blake Hanson about how the federal government’s new plans to tackle climate change will impact Texas.
Photo Illustration by Kelly Caminero / The Daily Beast / GettyAt the risk of awarding the title prematurely, we think we’ve found the weirdest study published in 2022. Scientists strapped GoPro cameras to the bodies of six dolphins trained by the U.S. Navy, and recorded them hunting for food and consuming their prey in grisly detail. According to the study, there was a purpose behind this potential invasion of dolphin privacy; namely, to learn more about how the mammals hunted and ate.Scientists
“I wish I could be as brave as this raccoon!”
Neglected and polluted, the ponds were nearly barren of native species. But community efforts are starting to pay off
Social media posts claim a US heatwave in the summer of 1954 proves global warming is "only an agenda." This is false; temperatures did break records in the Midwest that year, but experts say isolated weather events do not disprove the science of climate change, which has made heatwaves more frequent and intense."There was no 'GLOBAL WARMING' or 'CLIMATE CHANGE' agenda in 1954. The current rhetoric is only an agenda about power control and wealth redistribution," says a July 28, 2022 Facebook po
Even the best public charging services aren't good enough, according to new survey that quizzed 11,554 drivers about charging EVs at public stations.
The fruit of this invasive plant makes good pies, but its vegetation can be death to salmon.
Hellbenders have strong jaws and a natural camouflage that’s perfect for blending in.
When politicians talk about reaching “net zero” emissions, they’re often counting on trees or technology that can pull carbon dioxide out of the air. What they don’t mention is just how much these proposals or geoengineering would cost to allow the world to continue burning fossil fuels. There are many proposals for removing carbon dioxide, but most make differences only at the edges, and carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere have continued to increase relentlessly, even through the pandemic.
The latest discovery comes amid water cuts for Western states due to severe drought slamming the region.
The Cincinnati Zoo’s newest baby hippo has a name!
"Everything points to a manmade catastrophe," one environmental expert tells CBS News, as 100 tons of dead fish are removed from the Oder River.
Gov. Newsom says Diablo Canyon needs to keep operating to meet California's renewable energy goals. That's wrong and dangerous.
A new study predicts Manatee County will see the second-highest increase in local hot days of any Florida county over the next 30 years.
A woman was killed by an alligator near a pond in South Carolina, the fourth known person to die of an alligator attack in the United States in 2022.
Arizona will get less water from the drought-stricken Colorado River as the federal government will impose deeper cuts. Here's what to know.
Western Rewilding Network calls for replacing livestock grazing on public lands with protected habitat for two of the most controversial wild species Western Rewilding Network calls for replacing livestock grazing on public lands with protected habitat for two of the most controversial wild species
How close would you like to get to a great white shark? The winner of the Ocearch Meet a Shark Sweepstakes will get to tag one on a working vessel.
Massive incentives for clean energy in the U.S. law signed Tuesday by President Joe Biden should reduce future global warming “not a lot, but not insignificantly either,” according to a climate scientist who led an independent analysis of the package. “This is the biggest thing to happen to the U.S. on climate policy,” said Bill Hare, the Australia-based director of Climate Analytics which puts out the tracker. Not as much as Europe, and Americans still spew twice as much heat-trapping gases per person as Europeans, Hare said.
WHY IS THE COLORADO RIVER THREATENED? There are two Colorado Rivers in the U.S. — the 1,450-mile (2,334 kilometer) powerhouse of the West and the over 800-mile (1,287-kilometer) river that starts and ends in Texas. It supplies seven states plus Mexico but its flow has dropped drastically over time because of water overuse by farming and growing populations, hotter temperatures, evaporation and less melting snow in the spring to replenish the river.
The rush to build wind farms to combat climate change is colliding with preservation of one of the U.S. West’s most spectacular predators — the golden eagle — as the species teeters on the edge of decline. Ground zero in the conflict is Wyoming, a stronghold for golden eagles that soar on 7-foot (2-meter) wings and a favored location for wind farms. As wind turbines proliferate, scientists say deaths from collisions could drive down golden eagle numbers considered stable at best.