The past two decades show that climate and energy trend lines aren’t under the total control of the person in the White House.
The Federal Reserve said Friday that it is leaving an international grouping of central banks that focused on how the financial system could help combat climate change. The Fed's membership has been criticized by Republicans in Congress.
The Federal Reserve announced on Friday it had withdrawn from a global body of central banks and regulators devoted to exploring ways to police climate risk in the financial system. In a statement, th
Click the downloadable video: Climate Change and Children's Health: Mental Health Video ft Lisa Patel, MD The risks from increasingly frequent extreme weather events, climate disasters, and other ...
The Federal Reserve said on Friday that it will quit a group dedicated to addressing the risk climate change poses to the global financial system. Why it matters: The Fed's exit from the coalition suggests a huge pivot underway relative to years past.
Top US, Canadian banks pull out from a global banking sector climate coalition - Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), while European banks threatened to withdraw unless it softens its rules, read more to
The Federal Reserve's withdrawal from an international climate initiative highlights a shift in U.S. policy towards environmental regulations.
People are already impacted by food system shocks, water insecurity, heat stress and infectious diseases. If unchecked, mass mortality, mass displacement, severe economic contraction and conflict become more likely.
Today, the Los Angeles Times is launching Boiling Point, a podcast about climate change and the environment in California and the American West. Yes, that’s the same name as this newsletter. I hope you’ll subscribe and listen.
As college students (one from Minas Gerais, Brazil, the other from California), we were excited to be part of the global youth team designing this curriculum. Our generation has grown up knowing that our planet is suffering under the intense duress of climate change.
Senators quizzed Trump's Interior secretary nominee, proposed EPA administrator and Treasury secretary nominee.