A new study says human-caused climate change made Atlantic hurricanes about 18 mph stronger in the last six years.
This year's Atlantic hurricane season, which ends Saturday, has been described by meteorologists as one of the busiest on ...
Hurricanes are getting stronger, and humans are primarily to blame, according to a new study by Climate Central.
Every Atlantic hurricane that formed this year had higher wind speeds because of climate change. Two likely would have ...
The Atlantic spawned 11 hurricanes this season, above the annual average of seven. Also above average was the number of major ...
Human-caused climate change has intensified the strength of Atlantic hurricanes by about 18 miles per hour over the past six ...
A study shows that climate change increased this year's hurricanes significantly, boosting the wind speeds of Beryl, Helene, ...
A new analysis finds that the storms’ wind speeds increased by up to 28 miles per hour, boosting their destructive power.
Experts say that the worst effects of Hurricanes Helene and Milton were exacerbated by climate change. Hurricanes may ...
Released on Nov. 20, a new study with fact-checked and proven statistics seems to say yes. The bulk of the study lies in the ...
The 2024 hurricane season officially ends - and it has been more active than usual, with climate change partly to blame.
The deaths make 2024 the deadliest hurricane season since 2005, said National Hurricane Center director Michael Brennan.