Artificial intelligence has emerged as a powerful tool to improve the accuracy and timeliness of forecasting, with 2024 proving to be a banner year for swift progress.
The data hasn’t improved since then, although, fortunately, AI tools have vastly improved and offer new possibilities.
Precise, verifiable, and granular data is key to climate risk mitigation. Increasingly, artificial intelligence systems emerge as the preeminent tools for collecting and analyzing climate insights with unprecedented accuracy and scope.
President Donald Trump’s promise to go all in on fossil fuels includes praise for coal, a reliable but polluting energy source that's long been in decline. Trump this week suggested coal can help meet surging electricity demand from manufacturing and the massive data centers needed for artificial intelligence.
In early January 2025, amid the wildfires in Los Angeles, multiple posts about the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on climate change circulated widely. Since LA is on fire and part of the south is frozen,
Microsoft invests $200 million in reforestation in Brazil. Teaming up with Re.green, the aim is to restore vital land and combat climate change.
Exponential growth in big data and computing power is transforming climate science, where machine learning is playing a critical role in mapping the physics of our changing climate.
Generative AI chatbots fail to adequately reflect fossil fuel companies’ complicity in the climate crisis, a Global Witness investigation has found.
Davos 2025 is buzzing with discussions on AI, climate change, and trade tariffs as leaders prepare for changes and focus on growth. Also, the Indian delegation is making waves, showcasing investment o
The decisions that companies make about how much to grow oil production are first and foremost going to be determined by market signals.”
Davos 2025 is buzzing with discussions on AI, climate change, and trade tariffs as leaders prepare for changes and focus on growth. Also, the Indian delegation is making waves, showcasing investment o
Scientists warn that the Arctic is warming far more quickly than the rest of the world and that this rapid change significantly impacts species, glaciers, and the planet’s climate. In the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard,