California Wine Makers Examine Climate's Effect On Their Industry After several bad wildfire seasons and now rolling power blackouts, wine makers in Sonoma and Napa are having to take a hard look at how climate change is impacting their product and business. Eric Westervelt
U.N. Climate Summit Goes To Extra Time, But Ends With Major Questions Unresolved The talks showed deep divisions, as small countries highly vulnerable to rising seas and powerful storms were at odds with wealthy, high-emitting countries like the United States. Laurel Wamsley
Powered By Faith, Religious Groups Emerge As A Conduit For A Just Solar Boom The solar industry may be booming, but clean energy's financial perks still aren't reaching communities that need them most. Religious institutions are stepping up to bridge the gap. Avery Ellfeldt
Why People With Climate Change Concerns Don't Always Do What's Best For The Environment NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Ashley Whillans, behavioral scientist at Harvard Business School, about why many people care deeply about climate change, but slow to adopt climate-friendly behaviors.
Rice has higher arsenic levels because of climate change, Seattle researchers find The list of foods affected by climate change is growing. A new University of Washington study has found that rising temperatures will increase arsenic levels in rice. Ruby de Luna
Why Climate Change Threats Don't Trigger An Immediate Response From Human Brains NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilbert about why the human brain doesn't respond to threats posed by climate change as quickly or proactively as seems warranted.
After Greta Thunberg Wins 'Time' Honor, Trump Suggests She 'Chill' And Watch A Movie The climate activist responded like the social media-savvy teenager she is, with a sly change to her Twitter profile. Laurel Wamsley
California Says Insurers Can't Cancel Policies For People In Areas Hit By Wildfires NPR's Audie Cornish talks with California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara about the state enacting a temporary moratorium on insurance companies dropping homeowners in areas affected by fires.
Greta Thunberg Is 'Time' Magazine's Person Of The Year For 2019 She burst onto the world stage after organizing school strikes and protests to call attention to the climate crisis. The Swedish activist, 16, is the youngest person to earn the title. Bill Chappell
U.K. Farmers Join Protest Group To Show Commitment To Climate Causes More farmers in Britain are joining a climate change activist group. U.K. farmer Dagan James tells NPR's Rachel Martin that farmers are increasingly feeling the effects of global warming.