Ten communities have received a total of $200,000 for developing manuals for extreme heat response planning, and $500,000 in funding will go to Duke University’s Heat Policy Innovation Hub for heat policy research and outreach.
News
New Federal Advisory Committee members will provide feedback to improve NOAA’s climate tools and services.
A global reduction in sulfur pollution from shipping that has inadvertently contributed to recent warming of the Earth is providing insights into the challenge of evaluating marine cloud brightening.
NOAA’s newest hurricane model, the Hurricane Analysis and Forecast System (HAFS), advanced the accuracy of hurricane forecasts and supported community preparedness actions during the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season.
New research confirms that, even as the Arctic warms faster than the rest of the world, cold-air outbreaks from the polar region will continue across the Northern Hemisphere in the coming decades.
After a long wait, La Niña conditions developed in December. What makes this La Niña unusual?
Through partnerships with private-industry cruiseliners, cargo vessels, sailboats, and moorings, the Ships of Opportunity Program enables researchers to track the global ocean’s uptake of carbon.
Throughout 2024, NOAA Research continued work to better understand challenges Americans face: droughts, floods, severe weather, heat waves and other environmental hazards.
The NOAA Climate Program Office and the NOAA Marine Protected Areas Center have launched a new story map for the NOAA Blue Carbon Inventory Project.