Americans are not responding to climate change with the urgency that scientists are telling us the problem demands. The reason why may be all this pleasant weather climate change has brought us so far.
With the science of climate change basically settled, some in the movement are arguing climate activists need to do less marching and start pushing a clear legislative agenda.
The Supreme Court may have thrown Obama's plan to cut carbon dioxide emissions into legal limbo. But that's not stopping Pennsylvania from taking its own steps to combat climate change.
An interfaith group representing religious people across Pennsylvania says it's time to start thinking about fracking—and climate change—in moral terms.
Despite warnings from the U.S. Forest Service, not everyone's buying that warming temperatures will spell doom and gloom for the sugar maple across the Midwest and Northeast.
A new study from Penn State University suggests that science teachers in American classrooms aren't always adequately prepared to talk to their students about climate change.
Even if we take dramatic steps to reduce carbon emissions, the reality is for the next 40 years—at least—we’re going to need to farm in a changing climate.