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Read the full report: Climate change increasing pregnancy risks around the world due to extreme heat (2020-2024) Download the data: For 247 countries, territories, and dependencies and 940 cities ...
Click the downloadable graphic: Pregnancy Heat-Risk Days Added by Climate Change Extreme heat presents dangerous risks to global maternal health and birth outcomes. According to the U.S. Centers ...
As sea levels rise, flooding is becoming more common along U.S. coasts, where 29% of the population lives. Climate Central’s Coastal Risk Finder provides maps and analysis of the people, homes ...
Or click here for a national summary of county results. Reports are available only for coastal counties with accessible data and substantial results, and some do not include property assessments.
Climate Central is pleased to announce the release of CoastalDEM® v2.1, a near-global digital elevation model for ocean coastal areas. CoastalDEM v2.1 has ...
The Climate Shift Index: Ocean (Ocean CSI) is a system that computes the climate change fingerprint on daily ocean temperatures. More specifically, it indicates how human-caused climate change ...
Looking for information about the Climate Shift Index: Ocean? Head here. Click to visualize the impact of climate change on today's temperature anywhere on Earth. We often hear how global average ...
The Climate Shift Index (CSI), Climate Central’s daily temperature attribution system, applies the latest peer-reviewed methodology to map the influence of climate change on temperatures across ...
The planet needs to go on a carbon diet. Our current catastrophes—devastating wildfires, stronger hurricanes, and rising seas—are consistent with the warnings scientists made in the 1980s and ...
In 2014, the common-held story among scientists, policymakers and the media went something like this: No individual heat wave, flood or drought can be linked to climate change. That was wrong, and ...
Table 3. Top 10 ACIS stations with the highest number of days at or above a CSI of 3 during April 2025. We analyzed 191 Applied Climate Information System (ACIS) stations associated with U.S. cities.
For every 1°F of warming the air can hold an extra 4% of moisture, increasing the chances of heavier downpours that contribute to the risk of flash floods. The rapid onset of flash floods ...