Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
Climate & Environment
Researchers found that in drier years, larger animals are more likely to head closer and closer to where people live.
Listen
4:05
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
Senate leaders failed to fix an environmental law rollback for advanced manufacturing, leaving pollution concerns untouched as session ends.
-
The report didn't find high lead levels in the Palisades Fire area. And the county added that “there is no evidence of widespread contamination from fire-related chemicals.”
-
Democratic state leaders have proposed a host of energy bills that seek to balance affordability with the state’s ambitious climate goals.
-
A UCLA study in the journal Science Advances also found a likely increase in miscarriages around the methane leak in the northern San Fernando Valley in 2015.
-
Cool today, slightly warmer over next few days.
-
After rising for years, the number of residential installations in the city of Los Angeles began to drop in 2023. The city isn’t subject to recent changes in state incentives, but other factors may be contributing to the decline.
-
Another cool day is on tap for the region.
-
As extreme weather becomes more frequent, so too have post-disaster contractor scams like excessive billing and shoddy repairs.
-
UCLA researchers have found that hydrogen sulfide emissions at the Salton Sea are at elevated levels and can cause serious health effects to those that live near the lake.
-
Scientists report that they may have found Martian minerals that on Earth are formed by microbes in oxygen-free, muddy environments. But they say other explanations are possible, too.
-
Temperatures will cool gradually this week.
-
At the Port of Los Angeles, the ocean’s waves area creating renewable energy in a pilot project by the company Eco Wave Power.
The heaviest rainfall fell overnight Thursday into Friday morning in the L.A. and Ventura counties with continued showers into the weekend.
Support your source for local news!
In case you missed it
-
911 recordings obtained by LAist shed light on why and how emergency planning continues to leave people with disabilities behind.
-
LAist investigates illicit dumping at three Antelope Valley sites.
-
An LAist investigation found toxic heavy metals in samples of fire retardant collected from the Palisades, Eaton and Franklin fires. Here's what that means.
More Stories
-
Workers and tourists in Greece took a midday break when temperatures reached 113 degrees recently — essentially reviving an old tradition: the siesta. As temperatures rise, should siestas become common again?
-
The challenge is almost unimaginable: Truckloads of sand — enough to fill five Olympic swimming pools — were needed for one job to save just one small stretch of beach.
-
The effects of Tropical Storm Hilary continue.
-
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declared the decision today.
-
The coastal areas and valleys will remain cool through the week. More inland, temperatures will rise slightly.
-
And potentially lower your insurance rates.
-
The James Webb Space Telescope is not only finding galaxies forming 200 to 500 million years after the Big Bang, but also that they are bigger and brighter than astronomers expected.
-
The coastal areas and valleys will remain cool through the week. More inland, temperatures will rise slightly.
-
A new image from NASA's James Webb Space Telescope reveals what Earth's sun could have looked like in its infancy.
-
Researchers are studying the health impacts on residents who were subjected to the months-long natural gas exposure.