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UCLA scientists say extreme heat linked to climate change was a factor in the fires' intensity. How climate change worsened the most destructive wildfires in L.A. history - Los Angeles Times ...
The language we use to talk about climate change is too abstract, too politicized and too divorced from the things most ...
UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain, left, with Armando Quintero, director of the California Department of Parks and Recreation, at a conference hosted by Together Bay Area in 2023. (Jennifer Hale) ...
The public is tuning out the seemingly slow warming of the world, but it doesn't have to be that way, argue Grace Liu and ...
Former Canadian Minister of Environment and Climate Change Catherine McKenna and former Chair of the California Air Resources Board Mary D. Nichols discuss climate change policy at a UCLA School ...
Climate change has doubled the chances of a catastrophic storm causing devastating flooding that would likely displace millions of people and leave an area like Los Angeles under water, according ...
UCLA medical school pushes future doctors to become climate activists, leaked class assigmenments purport to show. First-year students are reportedly assigned readings in the required course ...
Project Sea Change, led by researchers at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering, can now learn if extracting that carbon from the ocean is an effective way to reverse the effects of climate change.
Extreme conditions helped fuel the fast-moving fires that destroyed thousands of homes. Scientists are working to figure out how climate change played a role in the disaster.
Even without reaching heat wave levels, sustained high temperatures may contribute to a litany of health issues.
The UCLA scientists wrote that because climate change is set to continue, so will the “expectation of even more intense wildfires when all of the other necessary conditions for fire occur.” ...