ClimateWire News
AI’s no-win choice: Using huge amounts of water or energy
Tech companies face a fundamental choice with no winning answer for keeping data centers cool.
The administration has a new climate change office. It’s headed by a climate critic.
The office that produces the National Climate Assessment has been reconstituted, after the administration gutted it last year.
Water levels in two major Western reservoirs hit near-record lows
The depletion of Lake Mead and Lake Powell is just one result of intense drought that has damaged crops and spread wildfires.
Specialty farmers adapt harvests, protect crops in face of extreme heat
They don't always have access to the same safety net as farmers of traditional commodity crops such as corn and soybeans when extreme weather hits, experts say.
India hydropower generation drops from El Niño-fueled dry spell
Cumulative monsoon rainfall across India was 38 percent below normal this year through July 1, according to the India Meteorological Department.
China’s Tencent inks deal for carbon-removal credits from Indonesian project
The tech firm entered a 10-year agreement with Singapore-based carbon developer Thryve.Earth to purchase credits generated from an agroforestry project on the island of Sulawesi.
China allocates millions for disaster relief after storms, landslide
In southern China's Guangxi region, severe flooding inundated cities and stranded residents after heavier-than-expected rainfall from a tropical storm.
Trump denies disaster aid for four Democratic-led states
The move deepens what Democrats say is the president's politicization of federal emergency management decisions.
Clean energy trade group turns federal focus to manufacturing, transmission incentives
The American Clean Power Association is assessing the policy and tax landscape for renewable energy sources after Republican rollbacks.
Trump EPA air chief heads for the exit
If his deregulatory actions survive judicial scrutiny, Aaron Szabo will have played a key role in reshaping EPA’s regulatory power.
Europe’s cows get a geopolitical upgrade
The EU’s plan to support livestock farmers recasts a climate problem as a strategic asset.
Spain, Netherlands, 5 other countries issue plea to protect ETS
They say the European Commission should “strengthen the EU ETS and make it future-proof to ensure long-term investment predictability and regulatory stability."
EU banks face regulatory scrutiny over exposure to heat risks
Heat-related damage tends to be less straightforward to measure than losses caused by floods and wildfires, the European Banking Authority said.
Faster, fiercer wildfires are testing evacuation plans
Mounting death tolls in the U.S., Australia, Chile and other countries over the past decade have revealed how unprepared many areas are for such infernos.
Germany recorded 5,000 excess deaths in late-June heat wave
The figures are the latest evidence of the deadly toll of recent extreme temperatures across Europe.
Climate cash is about to pour into East Coast states. Here's why.
The Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative is delivering a windfall that states can use to cut planet-warming emissions — or lower bills.
Oregon regulators hike power rates for data centers
The state's largest electric utility got approval to adjust power prices in line with a first-in-the-nation law.
‘Can you help us?’: US oil execs turn to Trump to topple Europe’s climate rules
Here's an inside look at how a climate regulation became a battleground between the U.S. and Europe.
Extreme heat pushed electricity demand to near record levels
Boiling temperatures taxed regional grids in ways that are rarely seen due in part to data centers and climate change.
Heat illness records set last week from New York to Minnesota
Blistering temperatures and widespread power outages led to record rates of emergency-room visits related to heat, CDC data shows.
