For many Superbowl is the epitome of our consumer culture – but the league and the teams have been quietly working on a plan to add a tinge of green to Sunday’s big game.
As warnings over a $200 price tag on oil strengthen, RTCC takes a look at what this would mean?
Conflict expert Dr Jeffrey Mazo looks at the role climate change played in the wave of popular uprisings that swept through the Middle East.
For the Inuit residents of Shishmaref, a tiny island between Alaska and Siberia, climate change is a threat to their traditional way of life.
What role could drought, rising food prices and extreme poverty play in exacerbating tensions in the MENA region?
In the second blog from the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO Isabelle Niang writes about the threat to West Africa from rapid coastal erosion.
Today is officially the most depressing day of the year, but RTCC brings you five reasons to feel positive about climate change and sustainability.
North London outfit Creative Health Lab aim to use their Anaerobic Digestion technology to provide gas and fertiliser for local community.
One designer aims to find a solution for the 1.2 billion people still without access to clean and safe water.
With energy companies announcing yet another change in prices, could it be time for the UK to look towards an energy mix which includes more renewables?
Paraffin and kerosene are currently used for lighting by millions in the developing world – but a new UN-led LED scheme could save money and cut emissions.
The Minus One project aims to encourage people to print less and save paper by reducing their font size by one.
Find out what Jennifer Aniston does in the shower to fight global warming and which media mogul links cannibalism and climate change.
As Shale Gas exploration rapidly expands in the US, health officials have called for an examination of any potential public health implications of the process.
Veteran activist gives RTCC his thoughts on Durban protests, influence of green groups and the 2012 US Presidential elections.
The Liter of Light project, showcased by the UN’s Momentum for Change project at the Durban Climate Summit aims to bring affordable light to one of the 12 million living without it.
The President of the Maldives has urged the Australian government to brace itself for a wave of climate refugees as his country’s residents look for a new home.
2011 was one of the costliest years on record in terms of natural catastrophe, 90% of which were weather related.
Katharine Hayhoe speaks to RTCC about the state of climate science in the USA, the daily attacks she and colleagues suffer and her efforts to clean up the climate debate.
Katharine Hayhoe, author of a scrapped chapter on climate change in Newt Gingrich’s new book, says climate scientists in the US are being persecuted for their work.