Through the eyes of award-winning journalists, CCNow’s climate special ‘Burning Questions’ makes clear that climate change is one of the biggest problems humanity has ever faced. The combustion of oil, gas, and coal is causing global temperatures to rise, which in turn causes more extreme weather. Heat waves have gotten hotter and longer, droughts more […]
Read More… from Climate Change Is Here — but so Are the Solutions
Ahead of the fast approaching United States midterm elections and the COP27 global climate summit, Covering Climate Now is airing an unprecedented TV special that asks the most urgent question of our time: Will humanity act in time to preserve a livable planet? Co-hosted by Al Roker and Savannah Sellers of NBC News, ‘Burning Questions’ […]
Read More… from CCNow’s TV Special ‘Burning Questions’ Airs October 25
Each month, Covering Climate Now speaks with different journalists about their experiences on the climate beat and their ideas for pushing our craft forward. This week, we spoke with Jeff Berardelli, the chief meteorologist and climate specialist at WFLA-TV in Tampa, Florida. Berardelli was previously the meteorologist and climate specialist for CBS News in New […]
Read More… from Q&A: WFLA’s Jeff Berardelli: “Most People in Harm’s Way Are Not Watching the National Media”
The Guardian has been Covering Climate Now’s lead media partner since our founding in April 2019. That October, Katharine Viner, the Guardian’s editor-in-chief, announced a climate pledge that would further strengthen the paper’s already strong commitment to the story. “The climate crisis is the most urgent issue of our times,” Viner wrote, and it required […]
Read More… from The Guardian’s Climate Pledge Points the Way
“Only connect!” E.M. Forster’s exhortation in the novel ‘Howards End’ is also good advice for climate reporting. When extreme weather events occur — such as Hurricane Ian, which devastated Florida last week, or the record downpours that have flooded Pakistan since June leaving one-third of the country under water— it’s essential for news reports to […]
Read More… from Don Lemon Was Right to Link Climate Change and Hurricane Ian
Sign up to receive our weekly newsletter Yesterday afternoon, Hurricane Ian crashed into Florida’s west coast, bringing with it surging seawater and catastrophic, 150mph winds. In the coming days, the storm is forecast to pass east over Florida into the Atlantic, before turning northwest and hitting Georgia and the Carolinas as a tropical storm. Video from […]
Read More… from Getting Political About Hurricane Ian Is a Journalistic Responsibility
Each month, Covering Climate Now speaks with different journalists about their experiences on the climate beat and their ideas for pushing our craft forward. This week, we spoke with Brazilian journalist Eliane Brum and Guardian correspondent Jonathan Watts, who recently launched Sumaúma, a news platform dedicated to in-depth coverage of the Amazon rainforest. We spoke […]
Read More… from Q&A: Sumaúma Covers the Amazon Like It’s “the Center of the World”
Sign up to receive our weekly newsletter There’s been a lot of big, sometimes surprising, climate news from Climate Week NYC and the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) this week. To help get you up to speed, here is some of what journalists need to know leading up to the US midterm elections and COP27 in […]
Read More… from Biden Administration Working To Oust Climate Denier as World Bank President
Twice each month, Covering Climate Now speaks with different journalists about their experiences on the climate beat and their ideas for pushing our craft forward. This week, we spoke with Obi Anyadike, the Africa editor for the New Humanitarian, a nonprofit newsroom reporting on humanitarian crises worldwide. We spoke about the emerging hunger crisis in East […]
Read More… from Q&A: Obi Anyadike on East African Drought and Covering Climate in the Global South