News

The resulting graph, called the Keeling Curve (after Charles David Keeling, the scientist who kicked off the effort) is a ...
Cities, insurers, and the public used the Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters database to plan for the future. So ...
The federal government is ending its tracking of billion-dollar weather disasters, a resource that documented 27 such events last year alone, as Lake Mead and other regions continue facing drought.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)—which has been experiencing massive staff layoffs and funding cuts by the Trump administration—has announced it will stop tracking the cost ...
A popular database that tracked the nation's growing number of billion-dollar disasters is going away, in another of the ongoing changes at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The ...
NOAA's database documents weather-related disasters causing at least $1 billion in damage (adjusted for inflation) since 1980 ...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will no longer track the cost of climate change-fueled weather disasters, ...
The move is also yet another of President Donald Trump’s efforts to remove references to climate change and the impact of ...
This is not just a little haircut for a large federal agency—it’s grabbing the scissors and stabbing the agency through the ...
The agency maintains the global backbone of measurements of CO2 and other gases, but these are at risk of being curtailed if ...
The insurance industry used the public database to estimate future costs, while local governments turned to it for lessons on ...