markgongloff
Climate take farmer for Bloomberg Opinion
Bloomberg - Are you a robot?www.bloomberg.com
Study: Heavy snowfall and rain may contribute to some earthquakeswww.eurekalert.org <p>Episodes of heavy snowfall and rain likely contributed to a swarm of earthquakes over the past several years in northern Japan, MIT researchers find. Their study is the first to show climate condit...
Bloomberg - Are you a robot?www.bloomberg.com
The Oil Money Funding Trump’s Legal Defenseheatmap.news Some of the industry’s biggest boosters and beneficiaries really, really want to keep Trump out of jail.
No, Having Kids Right Now Doesn’t Make You a ‘Moron’www.bloomberg.com The answer to chaotic climate change is to make the planet better for children, not to stop having them.
Wildfire Smoke Is Coming for the US Again. We’re Not Ready.www.bloomberg.com As long as people keep burning fossil fuels and spewing heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere, the blazes will become more frequent and intense.
The Solar Revolution Is Dying in Waiting Lineswww.bloomberg.com A bloated backlog of renewable projects awaiting approval means a quick transition away from planet-heating fossil fuels will be anything but.
Sorry, But Joe Biden Can’t Build Your EV Chargerwww.bloomberg.com The White House and Congress can’t just brute-force a nationwide system the way the country launched an interstate highway system.
Gas Industry Guts Building Codes Meant To Make Going Electric Cheaperwww.huffpost.com The decision caps off the latest drama in the ongoing climate fight over building codes.
Too Many Homes Rest on a Slab of Climate Delusionwww.bloomberg.com Millions of houses are overvalued or possibly worthless because they lack adequate insurance against natural disasters.
Hottest city in US saw record 645 deaths related to high temperatures in 2023www.theguardian.com Number of heat-related deaths in Phoenix, Arizona was more than 50% higher than 2022, which officials say ‘can be prevented’
Florida Apparently Wants Workers to Die in the Heatwww.bloomberg.com After the hottest year in human history, the state is poised to prevent local governments from making their own rules to protect employees from extreme temperatures.