A new study debunked theories climate change could be ‘beneficial’ for temperature-related deaths as Europe warms. View on euronews
Nationalist Vox party has seized on ‘visceral’ public reaction to mishandling of floods, says transport minister
In Spain, a country already grappling with frequent forest fires, experts warn that urban-forest interfaces are expanding and amplifying fire threats. A 2010 study estimated over a million hectares of such land are at risk, and today, experts say the situation has worsened.
The world endured three of its top-20 costliest disasters on record in 2024, its fifth-deadliest wildfire, and a record three heat waves that caused more than 1,000 deaths.
Spain attracted a record/whopping 94 million tourists last year, making the Southern European nation famous for its Mediterranean coastline and historic sites one of the most visited countries on eart
Dr. Jesse Abrams from the University of Exeter said we are “grossly underestimating risk due to climate change and nature-related crises” in an interview.
As climate change makes rainfall more intense and infrequent, Catalan authorities are battling to provide security and drinking water to millions.
A new study finds that extreme temperatures — mostly heat — are projected to kill as many as 2.3 million people in Europe by the end of the century unless countries get better at reducing carbon pollution and adapting to hotter conditions.
Researchers predict that climate change will likely cause a sharp rise in heat-related mortality throughout Europe by the end of this century.
Extreme weather is becoming more destructive as the world warms, but how can we say that climate change intensified the fires in Los Angeles, typhoons in the Philippines, or flooding in Spain?
A new study warns that climate change will cause millions of heat-related deaths in Europe. Mediterranean cities face the highest risk.
Colder and warmer ambient temperatures were associated with significant increases in psychiatric issues among adolescents from two population-based birth cohorts in Europe.