Whether it's fair weather or foul, hurricane, tornado, blizzard, flood, volcano, climate & fire are the bill of fare here.
8/29/18
The man blocking climate research at the Department of the Interior has no qualifications other than having played football in high school with Ryan Zinke.
— Rep. Don Beyer (@RepDonBeyer) August 29, 2018
Culture of corruption.https://t.co/pI08VBAb9h
10/8/18
If you eat right, refrain from smoking, and wear a seatbelt consistently, you'll likely live long enough to see the Earth ravaged by climate catastrophe https://t.co/sr9AlGJQ5h
— David Frum (@davidfrum) October 8, 2018
10/8/18
Scientists say even if countries drastically limit global warming there will still be negative impacts on the Earth https://t.co/WGUTGjXjNH
— BuzzFeed News (@BuzzFeedNews) October 8, 2018
10/8/18
Experts say only drastic, immediate change can save us from the dangers of climate changehttps://t.co/CYfxDZ9SOb
— Jim Acosta (@Acosta) October 8, 2018
10/26/18
We might need to change the way we talk about climate change to help us cope with the uncertainty, and often alarming predictions for Earth's future. https://t.co/gz7anL8s7f
— NRDC(@NRDC) October 26, 2018
11/4/18
The planet's oceans could be absorbing up to 60 percent more heat since the 1990s than older estimates had found, new research suggests. via @sciam https://t.co/tRJ3Dk2myM
— NOVA | PBS (@novapbs) November 4, 2018
11/8/18
MUST READ & Please RT - we're proud to share this article featuring our Founder/Exec Dir., Louie Psihoyos: Putting a Human Face on Climate Change @CommArts - One more reason to #vote on #VoteTuesday https://t.co/Xsm2nOS2CP
— Oceanic Preservation Society / OPS (@OP_Society) November 6, 2018
11/21/18
New research from CU Boulder analyzed weather and crime data from 16,000 cities.
Read more from Colorado Public Radio1/9/19
Scientists Say Ocean Circulation Is Slowing (about 15 % since middle of last century). https://t.co/8xd0tdtzTB
— Svein T veitdal (@tveitdal) January 9, 2019
Here’s Why You Should Care.
Hotter summers in Europe, changing rainfall in the tropics, hurricane risks along the U.S. coast pic.twitter.com/ATLeiYlbjr
1/20/19
We'll be less prepared to deal with extreme weather this year thanks to the shutdown https://t.co/t4MOplbstI
— Mother Jones (@MotherJones) January 20, 2019