-
St. Louis is set to feel like Texas if the warming trend continues, a local scientist says.
-
Extreme weather fluctuations jeopardize the lives and livelihoods of people in the Midwest region.
-
A dry winter, El Ni帽o and the warmest winter temperatures on record are contributing to ongoing dry conditions across the Midwest.
-
Tuesday was the warmest Feb. 27 in St. Louis鈥 recorded history.
-
As snowfall in the upper Midwest melts with rising temperatures, it will bleed into parched waterways in Iowa and beyond, helping restore stream flows decimated by drought. But, could also carry the risk of flooding downstream.
-
The fifth National Climate Assessment says a warming climate, increasingly extreme weather and drought are threatening the Midwest鈥檚 economy and health.
-
Meteorologists and climatologists often have a tough job explaining climate change to the public, especially in places where audiences may be more skeptical of the science. In the Midwest and Great Plains, strong resistance has pushed some out of the field.
-
鈥淲hat we really need is a cold, wet and snowy winter to help recharge this river,鈥 said one climatologist.
-
St. Louis will be among the five metro areas most impacted by an 鈥渆xtreme heat belt鈥 projected to emerge across the central U.S. in the next 30 years, according to a study published last summer.
-
There isn鈥檛 a specific path for the state鈥檚 vision of zeroing out carbon emissions by 2050 and ensuring areas overburdened by past pollution fully benefit from the growing green economy.