Climate change is making extreme weather events and natural hazards more frequent and intense. Here’s how to prepare before they hit.
We must embed climate resilience at the core of our construction practices. Canada provides a compelling case study. Across the Fraser Valley, Southern Ontario, and the Atlantic coast, developers are ...
When a series of back-to-back atmospheric rivers hammered the West Coast in December 2025, the storms killed at least five ...
A powerful Kona Low is slamming Hawaii with heavy rain and hurricane-force winds, causing flash flooding, mudslides and blizzard conditions in the mountains. The storm has led to widespread road ...
Homeowners in Miami know that they have to be able to protect their homes from extreme weather. The hurricane-rated doors are ...
A powerful windstorm swept across Northeast Ohio Friday, bringing hurricane-force gusts as high as 85 mph to Cleveland and damaging winds across Cuyahoga, Lorain and nearby counties, according to the ...
Disney World is no stranger to more extreme weather events. The warmest month is typically July with the most rainfall occurring in June.
Heat can pose a serious — even fatal — risk, particularly for workers cleaning up after the disaster, according to new research from the University of Georgia and published by the peer-reviewed ...
The Northern Plains and Pacific Northwest are bracing for a brutal stretch of winter weather that will make highway travel ...
The climate pattern known for intense heat, floods and drought is likely to develop this summer, raising questions about disaster preparedness.