Wildfires are still raging in Southern California. A Park City-based climate and sustainability group says climate change is ...
L.A. had a significant temperature drop, with an average of 50 degrees—8.6 degrees lower than the historical five-year ...
The fires, likely to be the costliest in world history, were made about 35% more likely due to the 1.3°C of global warming ...
A quick scientific study finds that human-caused climate change increased the likelihood and intensity of the hot, dry and ...
Human-driven climate change set the stage for the devastating Los Angeles wildfires by reducing rainfall, parching vegetation, and extending the dangerous overlap between flammable drought ...
Climate change did not cause the Los Angeles wildfires, nor the now infamous Santa Ana winds. But its fingerprints were all ...
A new study finds that the region's extremely dry and hot conditions were about 35 percent more likely because of climate ...
A new attribution analysis found that climate heating caused by burning fossil fuels significantly increased the likelihood ...
A new report suggests that climate change-induced factors, like reduced rainfall, primed conditions for the Palisades and Eaton fires.
The unusually dry winter weather for LA, caused by climate change, meant fires had lots of fuel to burn through ...
Analysis found the hot, dry and windy conditions that drove the fires were 35% more likely due to 1.3C of warming.
An international panel of scientists says with "high confidence" that climate change is worsening Southern California's fire ...