CLIMATE

May 19 2026POLITICS

Why Climate Science Guidance in Courts is Stirring Up Legal Storms

A group of 23 state attorneys general, led by Tennessee’s top lawyer, isn’t happy with how climate science could end up influencing federal court decisions. Their beef? A chapter on climate science in a key manual used by judges seems to favor one side in ongoing lawsuits—especially those involving

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May 19 2026HEALTH

How cities, dirtier air, and shifting weather harm our lungs

City living used to mean better hospitals and faster ambulances. Now it often means breathing air that quietly damages lungs over years. Poor air quality isn’t just annoying—it rearranges how infections spread inside our chests. Warm air holds more water, which helps viruses and bacteria travel far

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May 18 2026HEALTH

Heat Waves and Hurt: How Extreme Weather Affects Older Chinese

Recent research looks at how the hottest and coldest days in China might make older people feel more pain. The study follows a large group of Chinese adults who are in their 50s and older, tracking them over several years. It focuses on two types of extreme weather: very hot days and extremely cold

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May 18 2026WEATHER

Rain on the Way: What Arkansas Can Expect This Week

Arkansas residents should prepare for a mixed bag of weather this week. Forecasters predict scattered thunderstorms starting Tuesday morning, with another possible round later in the day. A cold front pushing through the region will bring the chance of heavy rain that could last into Wednesday. Whil

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May 17 2026ENVIRONMENT

Methane from Livestock: A Small Problem with Big Solutions

Many governments push for drastic cuts in meat production, claiming livestock methane is a major climate threat. But science shows this fear is overblown. Even wiping out all 1. 6 billion cows wouldn’t cool the planet by much—just 0. 04°C. Sheep? Their removal would barely make a dent. New Zealand’s

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May 17 2026HEALTH

Hotter Days Mean More Hidden Health Risks

Scientists have been warning for years that a warming planet brings more than heat waves. It also spreads diseases once locked in one place. The recent hantavirus scare on a cruise ship off South America shows how quickly tiny changes in temperature can shift danger zones. Argentina has seen a shar

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May 16 2026BUSINESS

Energy Teams Up: Why Business and Climate Must Share Power Plans

The world is looking for ways to cut carbon while feeding the new wave of smart machines and factories. The problem is that energy, water, and cooling are all tied together, so solutions can’t be built in silos. Instead of hunting for a single “magic fix, ” experts say we need a team effort that m

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May 16 2026POLITICS

How Much Power Does the Energy Secretary Really Have Over Your Lights?

A courtroom debate last week asked a big question: Can one person in the government decide when the nation’s power grid is in trouble—and then keep old, polluting plants running without much say from anyone else? The case started after the Department of Energy ordered a Michigan coal plant to stay o

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May 16 2026HEALTH

Heat and Early Births: A Growing Global Concern

Around the world, rising temperatures might be silently pushing more babies into early arrivals. A wide study covering 13 countries found links between extreme heat and premature births. But most past research only looks at one place at a time or mixes many small studies together. That leaves big qu

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May 15 2026SCIENCE

Can sprinkling dust in the sky really help fight global warming?

Scientists are exploring wild ways to cool down Earth as burning coal, oil and gas keeps heating the planet. One company now says tiny particles spread high in the air could bounce some sunlight back into space. Their idea isn’t magic—it’s a high-tech plan borrowed from how volcanoes naturally cool

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