Extreme Heat Killed Over 70,000 In Europe Last Year, Study Finds. This Year Is On Track To Be Even Worse
Tuesday, 21 November 2023 () Record heat across Europe last summer was responsible for more than 70,000 deaths, according to research published in The Lancet Regional Health – Europe, a figure that captures only a fraction of health impacts of human-driven climate change, and is already poised to be surpassed this year after…
Study Warns of , 'Unprecedented
Drop in Performance' , For Students Globally.
A new study suggests that students around
the world experienced historic setbacks in
reading and math amid the COVID-19..
Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories Duration: 01:39Published
Russia Bans , ‘LGBT’ Movement.
On Nov. 30, Russia's Supreme Court deemed the "international LGBT public movement" to be an
extremist organization, BBC News reports.
LGBT activities were
banned..
Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories Duration: 01:31Published
Parts of Europe have seen the first snowfall of the year as wintery conditions move across the continent. Temperatures in Stockholm, the Swedish capital, dropped to -4 degrees Celsius (24.8F) as the..