Extreme heat: What to know about the deadliest climate risk of our time
Extreme heat is the deadliest climate risk of our time. It claims 489,000 deaths annually – more than floods, hurricanes, earthquakes and wildfires combined.
Extreme heat is the deadliest climate risk of our time. It claims 489,000 deaths annually – more than floods, hurricanes, earthquakes and wildfires combined.
A landmark decision by the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the United Nations' (UN) judicial body and highest court, outlines that countries have a duty to limit environmental harm....
More than 90 million people across eastern and southern Africa are facing extreme hunger as a result of widespread drought, a report from the National Drought Mitigation Center (NDMC) and...
目前,农民平均年龄偏高,超过55岁。
New research suggests that glaciers globally will lose 39% of their mass relative to 2020, even if temperatures stabilize at current conditions.
The tropics lost a record-breaking 6.7 million hectares of primary rainforest in 2024, according to new data from the University of Maryland’s GLAD lab, published via the World Resources ...
Electric vehicle (EV) sales exceeded 17 million globally in 2024, which represented more than 20% of global car sales.
世界農業者機構(WFO)のアルノー・ピュシュ・ペイ・ダリサック会長によると、世界の農業従事者の平均年齢は55歳を超えています。「多くの農業者が近く引退し、職を離れることになるでしょう。これは、若い世代に活躍の機会を提供することにもつながります」と同氏は述べています。
Heatwaves, droughts and wildfires.
The average age of the farmer is high - more than 55 years old.
If the current trends continue, the world could face $145 billion in insured losses in 2025, according to Swiss Re.
Over the past two years, bleaching-level heat stress has impacted a record-high 83.7% of the world’s coral reef area, and mass coral bleaching has been documented in at least 83 countries...
There is a significant climate action perception gap.
Record renewables growth led by solar helped push clean power past 40% of global electricity in 2024, according to a new report from Ember.
The global financial system is at risk, according to Allianz board member Günther Thallinger. In a recent LinkedIn post, he warned that escalating extreme weather events could soon make s...