The hot, dry and gusty weather that fed last month’s deadly wildfires in central and southern Chile was made around 200% more ...
The weather preceding wildfires that tore through Chile and Argentina last month was made three times more likely due to human-caused climate change.
Some two dozen people died in the wildfires. They destroyed homes and threatened some of the world’s oldest trees. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
Human-induced climate change, along with land-use shifts and budget cuts, likely worsened recent wildfires in Argentina and ...
More than thirty wildfires ripped through Chile this weekend, killing 19 and burning more than 135 square miles and hundreds of homes in the regions of Biobío and Ñuble. Meanwhile, fires have raged ...
Countries on Saturday elected Chile's COP climate summit chief negotiator to revive stalled talks on striking a landmark ...
Scientific study finds human-driven climate change and La Niña combined to create unusually dry conditions. Climate change ...
Tucked away in a remote desert town, a hidden vault safeguards Chile's most precious natural treasures. From long-forgotten ...
SANTIAGO (Reuters) -Chile's glaciers are facing a higher risk of collapse and landslides due to rising temperatures and the country's seismic and volcanic activity, according to an academic study. The ...
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