This statement was made in a message delivered on his behalf at the official launch of the ECOWAS National Biometric Identity Card (ENBIC) by the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) on Friday, November ...
By the end of this century, European summers are on track to stretch far beyond their familiar boundaries, turning what used ...
The critical takeaway is that all the literature points in the same direction, even if it disagrees on the particulars, ...
Tanzania is set to see the highest growth rate by 2100 (1.22), followed by Mauritania (1.18), Benin (1.11) and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (1.01)— all in Africa. Sub-Saharan Africa is ...
The impact of climate change will hit Cyprus’ economy, a study released on Tuesday said, projecting that as much as €29 ...
Sometimes papers are published that overturn the conventional wisdom. Other times papers are retracted since what they ...
British scientific journal Nature retracted a climate study due to data reliability issues, particularly problematic information from Uzbekistan that skewed results.
It’s hard enough for most of us to predict what we’re having for dinner tonight, much less how the the world will look in 2100.
While growing evidence shows that carbon emissions are harming the economy, the journal Nature found that an outlier paper had deep flaws. By Lydia DePillis In April 2024, the prestigious journal ...
The research, published last year in the prestigious journal Nature, projected that the world’s economic output would decline 62% by 2100 under a high-carbon emissions scenario. The estimate was much ...
A study forecasting a 62% decline in global economic output by 2100 due to climate change has been retracted following data inaccuracies.