Impacts

Extreme weather and rising emissions are making it harder for small farmers to grow nutritious food, complicating the Trump administration’s Make America Healthy Again campaign.

Lisa Held reports for Civil Eats.

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As extreme summer temperatures grip Phoenix, homeless residents face life-threatening dehydration, burns, and kidney failure with little protection from the heat.

Maggie Astor reports for The New York Times.

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A deadly wave of wildfires across Spain, Greece, and other Mediterranean countries has killed at least four people, forced mass evacuations, and prompted urgent calls for stronger climate adaptation measures.

Sam Jones and Helena Smith report for The Guardian.

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A July heat wave that scorched Norway, Sweden, and Finland was made 10 times more likely and 2°C hotter by human-caused climate change, researchers say, stressing how warming is reshaping even the coldest parts of Europe.

Louise Guillot reports for POLITICO.

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Kabul faces a worsening water shortage that could leave its six million residents without reliable access by 2030, as unregulated drilling, prolonged drought, and political isolation hamper efforts to secure new supplies.

Elian Peltier reports for The New York Times.

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A federal committee poised to overhaul how the U.S. assesses flood risks was quietly dissolved by the Trump administration in January, halting key updates to outdated Federal Emergency Management Agency flood maps.

Anna Kramer reports for NOTUS.

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A surge of meltwater from Suicide Basin has triggered another glacial outburst flood near Juneau, Alaska, putting new flood defenses to a critical test.

Joshua Partlow reports for The Washington Post.

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Changing weather patterns are scrambling traditional travel seasons, leaving tourists and tour operators to navigate growing unpredictability.

Tarang Mohnot reports for BBC.

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Climate change is driving a surge in health risks for children and pregnant women, especially in low-income regions, by increasing exposure to extreme heat, air pollution, and malnutrition, according to a new report.

Zoya Teirstein reports for Grist.

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As record-breaking heat grips much of Europe, France is at the center of a political and cultural clash over whether air conditioning is a public health necessity or an environmental misstep.

Aurelien Breeden and Josh Holder report for The New York Times.

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A growing number of cities, states, and federal agencies are working to protect outdoor workers as extreme heat becomes a more frequent and dangerous fixture of American summers.

Goodluck Ajeh reports for The Christian Science Monitor.

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More than 20,000 cyclists faced intense heat, humidity, and storms during this year’s RAGBRAI, raising concerns about the ride’s future as climate change reshapes conditions across the Midwest.

Anika Jane Beamer reports for Inside Climate News.

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A global study tracking 3,000 bird species over 70 years has linked climate-driven extreme heat to steep population declines in the tropics, with some species losing more than a third of their numbers.

Will Murray reports for ABC News.

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West Virginia will partner with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on long-awaited studies to assess flood risks in two river basins, nearly a decade after devastating floods killed 23 people in 2016.

Sarah Elbeshbishi reports for Mountain State Spotlight.

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A federal judge in Hawaii has reinstated a ban on commercial fishing in the Pacific Islands Heritage marine national monument, rejecting Trump administration efforts to loosen protections.

Coral Murphy Marcos reports for The Guardian.

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The Trump administration is moving to repeal a 2009 EPA rule that allows regulation of greenhouse gases, a shift scientists warn would worsen Arizona’s extreme heat, wildfire risk, and air pollution.

Joan Meiners reports for The Arizona Republic.

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A new federal study finds that some aquifers in South Dakota’s Black Hills region are being depleted faster than they can recharge, raising concerns over the area’s ability to sustain its growing population.

Bart Pfankuch reports for South Dakota News Watch.

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Energy Secretary Chris Wright recruited a group of long-standing climate skeptics to produce a Department of Energy study now being used by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to justify rolling back greenhouse gas regulations.

Benjamin Storrow reports for E&E News.

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