LIMA

May 28 2026WEATHER

Hail Is Getting Bigger as the Planet Heats Up

Climate change is turning hail into a bigger, costlier threat. A new study shows that as the world warms, storms will produce more large hailstones—those bigger than a marble—and fewer smaller ones. By the end of this century, the frequency of large hail could rise between 38 % and 47 %, depending

reading time less than a minute
May 28 2026POLITICS

Former Minister Signals Exit After Climate Deal Fallout

The ex‑environment chief has announced he will leave Parliament later this summer, citing disappointment over the government’s softened climate stance. He had already left the cabinet last year, stepping down as culture minister to oppose a deal that would allow Alberta to build an oil export pipeli

reading time less than a minute
May 28 2026ENVIRONMENT

How climate change is making droughts worse and faster

Scientists have noticed something worrying about droughts lately. They’re not just lasting longer—they’re also starting suddenly and getting severe very quickly. This change didn’t happen by accident. Research shows the main causes of these fast-developing droughts have shifted. In the past, lack of

reading time less than a minute
May 28 2026FINANCE

Food prices keep climbing: why your next grocery run will cost more

Americans are noticing sticker shock when they reach for their favorite snacks and staples. After gas prices jumped earlier in 2026, food bills are now rising faster than wages. The problem started with back-to-back bad weather: record heat in early spring tricked plants into growing early, then lat

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026WEATHER

Heat Wave Hits Europe: Record Temperatures and Rising Risks

Western Europe is experiencing an extreme heat event that has pushed temperatures to new highs. London recently recorded a May temperature of about 95°F, while parts of France reached nearly 99°F and Spain exceeded 100°F. The cause is a high‑pressure “heat dome” that traps hot air over the region, s

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Heatwaves, Climate Scenarios, and How We Talk About Them

In May, parts of the UK and France are feeling a heatwave that feels like mid‑summer, even though it’s spring. A high‑pressure system called a heat dome is behind the spike in temperatures, similar to what’s been seen in India and Canada. Meanwhile, the U. S. has had one of its worst spring droughts

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026ENVIRONMENT

Small businesses in New York push back against AI data centers

Across New York, nearly 500 small business owners are raising alarms about a new tech trend that could drain their resources. They’ve joined forces to call for a three-year pause on building giant AI data centers, worried these facilities will hike up electricity costs, strain water supplies, and ta

reading time less than a minute
May 26 2026ENVIRONMENT

Mountain Life Rebuilt After Glacier Collapse

A wooden hotel, finished in just 105 days, now stands in the Loetschen Valley as a sign that people are trying to move forward after their village was swallowed by ice and rock. The building, called Hotel Momentum, was opened a year after the Birch glacier slid down and buried most of Blatten. The s

reading time less than a minute
May 26 2026SCIENCE

Future Weather Match: How Cities Can Predict Each Other’s Heat

Scientists have found a way to let one city look at its own past heat levels and guess what the temperature will be in another place years later. The method blends a deep‑learning tool called a Temporal Convolution Network with a statistical test that checks if one time series can help predict anot

reading time less than a minute
May 24 2026WEATHER

Summer Heat Paying a Visit to Chicago Just in Time

A warmer weekend is rolling into Chicago just as Memorial Day approaches, giving residents a preview of summer conditions. The city started the weekend with typical late-spring freshness—temperatures near the upper 50s and a crisp breeze coming off Lake Michigan at about nine miles per hour. Light s

reading time less than a minute