News

Climate change has transformed summer into a season of extremes, leading to intense heat waves, droughts and wildfires that ...
Ground slumping in yedoma permafrost after a wildfire, in the interior of Alaska. Yedoma permafrost generally contains large ...
The Trump administration is looking to increase logging on federal land by 25% to reduce fire risks as bigger and more ...
The folks at the National Weather Service in Alaska were nervous. They were kind of caught between a rock and a hard place.
Bridger Aerospace is a leading U.S. aerial firefighting company, positioned to benefit from climate-driven wildfire growth.
By Chris Quilpa As summertime is in full swing in the Northern Hemisphere, what can we do to help protect us and the earth from global warming? I’d like to share with you what I’ve observed, learned, ...
A forest fire blazed in southern France Tuesday, after it crept across an area the size of 2,000 rugby pitches of trees, causing an autoroute to Spain to close temporarily and residents to evacuate ...
When Siberian volcanoes kicked off the Great Dying, the real climate villain turned out to be the rainforests themselves: once they collapsed, Earth’s biggest carbon sponge vanished, CO₂ rocketed, and ...
“Fire is always where people are,” Flannigan continues. “It goes with us wherever we go. But the genie is out of the bottle.
It is the first to document a link between global warming and increased fire intensity in Western U.S. forests. The study doesn't address what causes fires or firefighting effectiveness.
The data is publicly available on the World Resources Institute’s Global Forest Watch platform. In 2021, more than 140 countries agreed to halt and reverse global forest loss by 2030.
‘Global red alert’: Wildfires drive record forest loss in 2024, alarming data reveals Fires emitted 4.1 gigatonnes of greenhouse gases, more than four times the emissions from all commercial ...