Impacts

President Trump announced plans to begin shutting down the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) after the 2025 hurricane season, raising concerns about how states will cope with mounting disaster costs.

Gabriela Aoun Angueira reports for The Associated Press.

Keep reading...Show less

Submarine detection is growing more difficult as climate change alters how sound moves through warming seas, shrinking the range of sonar in key military regions.

Jacob Judah reports for The New York Times.

Keep reading...Show less

When Superstorm Sandy hit New York in 2012, pregnant women exposed to the storm and extreme heat gave birth to children who now show structural changes in brain areas linked to emotional health.

Kate Yoder reports for Grist.

Keep reading...Show less

A surge in toxic algal blooms driven by climate change and fertilizer runoff is devastating wildlife and reshaping ecosystems worldwide.

Patrick Greenfield reports for The Guardian.

Keep reading...Show less

A record-setting May heatwave in Iceland and Greenland was made roughly 3°C hotter by human-caused climate change, according to new research.

Euronews reports.

Keep reading...Show less

A dry spring across northwestern Europe coupled with new climate data showing the second-warmest May on record has fueled fears of worsening drought and crop losses.

Helena Horton reports for The Guardian.

Keep reading...Show less

With wildfires already burning more land than the annual average, Canada braces for another intense fire season fueled by extreme heat and climate-driven changes in its boreal forests.

Ian Livingston reports for The Washington Post.

Keep reading...Show less

The health of the Chesapeake Bay declined in 2025 after extreme rainfall and heat disrupted nutrient flows and oxygen levels, reversing some of the estuary’s recent environmental progress.

Brian Witte reports for The Associated Press.

Keep reading...Show less

A volunteer-driven effort to map uncharted areas of the Caribbean island of St. Lucia aims to improve disaster response in a region hit hardest by climate change.

Maddy Crowell reports for Grist.

Keep reading...Show less

Eighteen more nations signed onto a United Nations treaty to protect biodiversity in international waters, leaving the agreement just 11 ratifications short of taking effect.

Annika Hammerschlag reports for The Associated Press.

Keep reading...Show less

Flash floods killed more than 200 people in Valencia last fall, and now Spain is investigating whether delayed emergency alerts and poor crisis leadership contributed to avoidable deaths.

Chico Harlan, Michael Robinson Chávez and Roser Toll Pifarré report for The Washington Post.

Keep reading...Show less

A punishing heat wave pushed temperatures past 117 degrees Fahrenheit across parts of northern India this week, disrupting daily life and overwhelming the region’s fragile power and health infrastructure.

BiswaJeet Banerjee and Rajesh Roy report for The Associated Press.

Keep reading...Show less

A proposed federal wetland mitigation bank 50 miles from Hampton Roads has environmental groups warning it will gut local protections and sideline decades of coastal restoration efforts.

Markus Schmidt reports for Virginia Mercury.

Keep reading...Show less

As hurricane season begins, local officials across the U.S. are preparing for natural disasters with minimal support from a Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) that is being reshaped and downsized during President Donald Trump’s second term.

Scott Dance and Brady Dennis report for The Washington Post.

Keep reading...Show less

The Atlantic current system that helps regulate global climate may be weakening slower than some previous studies predicted, though uncertainty remains about when — or if — it could reach a tipping point.

Rebecca Egan McCarthy reports for Grist.

Keep reading...Show less

A sweeping €15 billion investment by the European Investment Bank will fund pollution control, infrastructure, and innovation to tackle worsening water stress across the EU.

Virginia Furness and Kate Abnett report for Reuters.

Keep reading...Show less

U.S. electric grid operators warned federal regulators this week that rapid growth in artificial intelligence and extreme weather are straining outdated energy policies and pushing blackout risks to unprecedented levels.

Peter Behr reports for E&E News.

Keep reading...Show less

In the lead-up to the United Nations Ocean Conference that opens today in France, scientists released ten policy recommendations urging world leaders to act swiftly on climate change, overfishing, and marine pollution based on existing scientific evidence.

Teresa Tomassoni reports for Inside Climate News.

Keep reading...Show less
FOLLOW US:
SUBSCRIBE:
Journalism that drives the discussion
Copyright © 2017 Environmental Health Sciences. All rights reserved.