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Human-caused climate crisis doubled the chances of the extreme weather that fuelled South Korea’s deadliest wildfires, a new study has found. The fires, which broke out in southeast Korea on 22 ...
During the wildfires, temperatures in South Korea climbed 4.5°C to 10°C (8.1°F to 18°F) above the 1991-2020 average, while western Japan exceeded the average by as much as 7°C to 8.5°C (12.6 ...
Parts of South Korea and Japan have had short rainy seasons this year. Scientists say that climate change has helped make the ...
Korea's oceans ministry said Wednesday it plans to nearly double the size of its marine protected area by 2027 as part of efforts to proactively address climate change.
The death toll in the wildfires raging across South Korea's southeastern region rose to 24 and the pilot of a firefighting helicopter was killed when the aircraft crashed on Wednesday, as the ...
The most hard-hit regions include central China, Japan, Korea, the Arabian Peninsula, eastern Australia and parts of South America and the Arctic. The most intense and consistent signal, however, ...
A series of wildfires that broke out in Japan and South Korea last week were fueled by human-induced climate change, according to a new rapid analysis released by a group of European researchers ...
Authorities in South Korea are battling wildfires that have doubled in size in a day in the country’s worst ever natural fire disaster.. At least 27 people have died and hundreds of buildings ...
Climate change made South Korea’s deadliest wildfires twice as likely, scientists find. Hot, dry and windy conditions in March were twice as likely because of warming caused by burning fossil ...