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India is one of the hottest nations, which fuels intertwined financial, health and labor risks, experts say.

Every one of the world’s 50 hottest cities was located inside India at the end of April—a global weather-tracking anomaly, according to a major air-quality monitoring platform.

An Unusual Heat Wave Strains the World’s Most Populous Country

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Climate Change

As El Niño Approaches, Scientists Predict Fierce Heatwaves, Wildfires and Floods

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Emerging Pacific Ocean heat, combined with ongoing human-caused global warming, is a grim recipe for deadly climate extremes. Heat alone already kills more than 500,000 annually.

Scientists said this week that a developing El Niño is likely to amplify heatwaves, droughts and floods this year, but warned that the long-term warming caused by burning fossil fuels remains the main driver of climate extremes.

As El Niño Approaches, Scientists Predict Fierce Heatwaves, Wildfires and Floods

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Climate Change

20 Years After ‘An Inconvenient Truth,’ Al Gore Grapples With the (Big) Wrinkle of Artificial Intelligence

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The former vice president sat down with Inside Climate News to discuss data centers, Trump, China and the future of American democracy.

NASHVILLE, Tenn.—Former Vice President Al Gore is knocking on wood.

20 Years After ‘An Inconvenient Truth,’ Al Gore Grapples With the (Big) Wrinkle of Artificial Intelligence

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Climate Change

After a Century Powering Its Growth with Dams, Seattle Settles With Tribes That Lost Their River

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As part of its relicensing of three dams on the Skagit River, Seattle City Light is paying $1.35 billion to three tribes, which will raise electricity rates but help the river and reservations.

NEWHALEM, Wash.—More than a century ago, Seattle City Light broke ground for a massive hydroelectric project here in a remote gorge of the North Cascades. Three dams soon powered the rise of what would become one of America’s richest and most liberal cities.

After a Century Powering Its Growth with Dams, Seattle Settles With Tribes That Lost Their River

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