Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
Climate & Environment
A slightly warmer day on tap, with highs in the mid 70s and blustery conditions.
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
A stubborn high-pressure system is anchored over the area, and temperatures aren't expected to ease up for at least another few days.
-
Temperatures around the Lake Fire will hover around the triple digits until next week.
-
The beaches have become mostly rocks and pebbles following coastal erosion as a result of heavy storms.
-
Vector control exterminators will spray the area with a mosquito-killing pesticide designed to knock out the blood-sucking pests known to carry diseases.
-
Most of SoCal is under an excessive heat warning through Thursday.
-
What your gut has in common with Arctic permafrost, and why it’s a troubling sign for climate changeNew research into the behavior of microbes in icy soils shows twice as much planet-warming carbon could be at risk of escaping into the atmosphere.
-
An often insurmountable price barrier is keeping many people from buying plant-based alternatives to beef, pork, and chicken.
-
This is the fourth year that the city of Glendale has cleared its fire-prone areas using goats and sheep.
-
Firefighters made progress Friday against a Northern California wildfire that triggered extensive evacuation orders, but damage assessments raised the number of destroyed structures to 25.
-
Triple-digit temperatures are in the forecast for the inland and desert region, and the rest of the region is under a heat advisory.
-
No shocker here: July 5 is once again one of the worst days for air quality of the year.
-
A high risk of wildfires remains through Saturday as SoCal swelters.
The Interior Department released its plan to open up federal waters off California’s coast to oil drilling, setting up a direct confrontation with Sacramento on energy and climate change.
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
-
For those wondering just how rare this event is.
-
The Irvine Ranch Conservancy is spreading the seeds across 40,000 acres of land throughout Southern California.
-
Highly reflective roofs can help cool our homes, communities and the globe.
-
In previous years, lightning in August has been disastrous. But that was when we were in drought conditions.
-
This year’s wet winter helped save the river from collapse. But a reckoning is on the horizon.
-
Two of the birds survived and are recovering.
-
Water tanks and swimming pools can go a long way.
-
California’s grid operator says the grid could get stressed as we try to cool ourselves down.
-
The National Weather Service is monitoring Hurricane Hilary along the coast of Baja California which could bring a tropical storm our way, including heavy rain, gusty winds and potential flooding to Southern California.
-
Gray wolves used to roam most of North America before being hunted, trapped and driven out of most of the continental U.S. by the early 1900s. They are native to California.