Scientists are gaining new insights into how plankton supports life on Earth — just as climate change is changing everything.
The bean native to South Sudan and a handful of other African countries has deep roots, thick leaves and big trunk help it thrive in extreme conditions where other coffees cannot.
According to the founder of the Environmental Voter Project, the best way to move beyond despair is to take action.
Earth's warming climate is causing problems for big coffee producers everywhere and some are looking to a rarely cultivated ...
Based on the recent Household Care Survey funded by Embassy of Ireland and launched by Oxfam on February 25, 2025, in the ...
Indonesia’s climate documents have failed to adequately address the social and environmental aspects that are fundamental to ...
"It costs quite a bit of money to travel north to get these snow conditions," Fisher told ABC News. "The warmer temperatures ...
COP16’s successful conclusion is the first United Nations meeting in many months that ended on a positive note, as various ...
As President Donald Trump's administration looks to reverse a cornerstone finding that climate change endangers human health and welfare, scientists say they just need to look around because it's ...
All but the largest companies operating in the EU will be released from environmental reporting obligations and having to ...
South Africa sought to salvage international talks on tackling global poverty on Wednesday as finance chiefs from several ...
Southern and Eastern Africa face deadliest cholera outbreak in a decade Only 16 per cent of African countries fully fund cholera plans Continent’s ...