Tonight, before a joint session of Congress, President Joe Biden will deliver his first State of the Union address. The backdrop is a frightening new war in Europe, which the president has described as a “brutal” and “unjustifiable” assault on the people of Ukraine. In a moment of great uncertainty, it will be on Biden […]
Read More… from Climate Looms Large Over Biden’s First State of the Union. Will the Coverage Say So?
There is great anticipation, but not much suspense, about the next big United Nations climate science report being released on Monday, February 28. Much of the news will be grim. What’s more, the report will have to compete for space in the news agenda with the Ukraine invasion and Russian president Vladimir Putin’s apparent threat […]
Read More… from Covering the New UN Climate Report Amid War in Ukraine
Sign up to receive our weekly newsletter. At noon today, CCNow and Scientific American are co-sponsoring a briefing for journalists on a little-known scientific development that carries paradigm-shifting implications for how people, especially young people, feel about the climate crisis and how governments and societies respond to it. Climate scientists Michael Mann of Penn State University […]
Read More… from The Best Science You Probably Haven’t Heard of
Last Friday, as speculation that Russia was preparing to invade Ukraine mounted, ABC News reported that “the specter of a military confrontation” was “pumping fresh life into the debate over whether president Joe Biden’s climate agenda is brushing up against difficult geopolitical realities.” The story, which was produced by the network’s newly formed climate unit […]
Read More… from Putting the Ukraine story in a Climate Context
Sign up to receive our weekly newsletter. If you’re not scared by climate change, you’re not paying attention. But fear alone, unleavened by the knowledge that this crisis can be fixed, is bad both for people and the planet. Fear can easily spiral human beings into anxiety and despair, which paralyzes them from the civic and […]
Read More… from The Antidote to Climate Anxiety?
Each month, Covering Climate Now speaks with a different journalist about their experiences on the climate beat, their reporting tips, and their ideas for pushing our profession and craft forward. This month, we spoke with Giles Trendle, who is the managing director of Al Jazeera English. From Al Jazeera’s offices in Doha, Qatar, Trendle oversees […]
Read More… from Q&A: Al Jazeera’s Giles Trendle on Covering Climate Across Borders and Boundaries
Sign up to receive our weekly newsletter. No matter your favorite news source, you’ve probably been seeing more stories on climate change lately. A new report by the Media and Climate Change Observatory at the University of Colorado Boulder, which monitors newspaper, radio, and TV reporting in 59 countries, finds that 2021 saw the highest […]
Read More… from More Climate Reporting, At Last
This story is published in collaboration with the Los Angeles Times. The third weekend of August 2020 was a hectic time for California. Wildfires raged, smoke filled the air, and power shortages had forced state officials to order rolling blackouts, meaning hundreds of thousands of homes lacked air conditioning during a brutal heat wave. That […]
Read More… from Getting Personal About Climate Change Made Me a Better Reporter
“What are Republicans for?” President Joe Biden asked during his January 19 press conference. “Name me one thing they’re for,” he added. Nowhere does that apply more urgently than to climate change. Months ago, Biden sent Congress legislation that could take the United States a long way towards halving planet-warming emissions by 2030, as science […]
Read More… from On Climate, What Are Republicans For?