Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
Climate & Environment
Some of the country's highest home insurance prices are in the central U.S., a region generally considered to be protected from climate-driven disasters.
Listen
4:32
Sponsor
More Stories
-
Bear 64F is believed to be one of three animals who've broken into dozens of homes in South Lake Tahoe in the last year and helped themselves to messy meals, enchanting the internet.
-
The cooling trend continues into the weekend. There's also a 20% chance of thunderstorms.
-
You don’t have to drive all the way to the desert to get a look at the phenomena.
-
Having torched 93,000 acres, the blaze is 93% contained, according to authorities.
-
The resort is shutting down after a season that stretched 275 days after record-breaking snowfall over the winter.
-
Feel free to keep your tree-related questions coming.
-
Heat loving, drought tolerant trees can look beautiful and make a difference as our climate keeps getting hotter.
-
Ingredients include hot air and an unstable atmosphere.
-
A new study finds that wave heights are getting bigger along the California coast as global temperatures have warmed.
-
Scientists brought in trees from around the world to see which ones can thrive in hot and dry conditions with minimal water. Will these soon line a road near you?
-
Record winter snow and rain eases drought restrictions, which had imposed two days a week watering in 2022.
-
The 77,000+ acre fire is driven by high temperatures, strong winds and invasive grasses.
Researchers found that in drier years, larger animals are more likely to head closer and closer to where people live.
Listen
4:05
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
-
UCLA plans on developing paint that actually helps keep buildings cooler.
-
After heavy snowfall left cows in northern California stranded and starving, officials launched an unusual rescue mission.
-
One in five Sierra Nevada conifers are no longer compatible with the environmental conditions around them, raising questions about how to manage the land. Researchers say it may get worse.
-
Starting at 8 a.m. Tuesday resident living in burn scar areas of the Alisal and Cave fires must leave the area. Another atmospheric river is expected to bring heavy rainfall and dangerous conditions.
-
A new atmospheric river set to arrive as soon as Monday could worsen already severe flooding, as the extra rain and snowmelt threaten to overflow rivers and streams at lower elevations.
-
As storms melt snowpack, managers released water to prevent reservoirs from overflowing and flooding Central Valley towns — and that sends water into the ocean. The warm rains melt snow that ideally would last into spring and help with water deliveries.
-
Forecasts put much of the state at risk for flooding over the next 1 to 7 days — although most of that danger is north of Los Angeles.
-
Even California communities accustomed to serious winters are struggling to deal with the consequences of continued extreme weather.
-
National Weather Service reports rain is expected to return Thursday — with the heaviest showers north of L.A.
-
It was so nice to see white sprinkled on the hills around our valleys.