Hurricanes are getting stronger, and humans are primarily to blame, according to a new study by Climate Central.
A new study says human-caused climate change made Atlantic hurricanes about 18 mph stronger in the last six years.
Every Atlantic hurricane that formed this year had higher wind speeds because of climate change. Two likely would have ...
Human-caused climate change has intensified the strength of Atlantic hurricanes by about 18 miles per hour over the past six ...
Hurricane season doesn't officially end until Nov. 30, but research is already coming out about how climate change is ...
A new study released Wednesday found that climate change intensified recent hurricanes by 18 miles per hour. The study, ...
A study shows that climate change increased this year's hurricanes significantly, boosting the wind speeds of Beryl, Helene, ...
A new analysis finds that the storms’ wind speeds increased by up to 28 miles per hour, boosting their destructive power.
Climate change increased maximum wind speeds for every Atlantic hurricane in 2024, according to a Climate Central analysis ...
At the beginning of each year, the director of National Intelligence provides Congress with a report on “worldwide threats to ...
Human-caused climate change is intensifying Atlantic hurricanes, with rising ocean temperatures adding an average of 18 mph ...
Warming ocean waters contributed to Helene's intensity but others were classic weather set ups, like a predecessor rain event ...