Scientists launch independent climate information site

Former staff from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have created Climate.us to continue sharing climate research after federal websites were shut down.

Rebecca Lindsey, who led content for the former Climate.gov site, was fired from NOAA in February. The Trump administration later eliminated the remaining team and closed the website.

The new site launched in June and has recorded about 800,000 page views in its first two weeks. Lindsey and two other full-time staff are updating the resources with input from scientists.

Other groups are also stepping in. The American Geophysical Union has started projects to protect environmental data from political changes. Adam Smith has moved a billion-dollar disaster tracking effort to the nonprofit Climate Central.

Advocates note that nonprofits lack the reach of federal platforms. They call for stronger legal protections to prevent future losses of public data.

Awọn iroyin ti o ni ibatan

Former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration staff have created Climate.us, a website that restores access to climate information previously available on a government site. The new platform launched this week to fill the gap left when Climate.gov was shut down last year.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

A prominent climate researcher has published new analysis disputing a 2025 US Department of Energy report that cited his work while reaching the opposite conclusion about human influence on global temperatures.

The US National Science Foundation will largely remove mooring arrays from the Ocean Observatories Initiative following federal funding reductions. Scientists say the move will impair monitoring of El Niño events and the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine urges the U.S. Department of Energy to link energy and water infrastructure research to better handle severe weather and other stresses.

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