🌿 Climate & Environment

March 16th, 2026

Today's top 5 stories, curated by Daily Direct.

Grist

Is the world heating up faster than we thought?

Global temperatures may be rising faster than existing models predicted, according to a new study raising fresh alarms about the pace of climate change. The findings suggest current mitigation timelines could be dangerously optimistic. Not everyone is convinced, however, with some scientists urging caution before drawing sweeping conclusions from the data.

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Mongabay

Climate-resilient housing models slow to gain ground in disaster-prone Bangladesh

Bangladesh faces some of the world's most severe climate-driven displacement, with 11.3 million people uprooted by 123 disaster events between 2008 and 2024. Despite the urgent need, climate-resilient housing solutions have struggled to scale in a country battered by floods, cyclones, and coastal erosion. The gap between innovation and implementation leaves millions of the most vulnerable exposed to the next inevitable disaster.

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Mongabay

Brazil is both the world’s environmental treasure and its most exposed victim (commentary)

Brazil's devastating 2024 floods in Porto Alegre β€” which killed hundreds, destroyed critical infrastructure, and paralyzed one of the country's major economic centers β€” offered a grim preview of the climate crisis bearing down on the nation. The cruel irony is that Brazil, home to the Amazon and among the world's most vital carbon sinks, is also among its most climate-vulnerable. As the news cycle moves on, the deeper story remains: the country bearing the greatest ecological responsibility is also absorbing the heaviest cost.

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Inside Climate News

New York Cooks Up a Plan to Boost Energy Efficiency in Public Housing

New York City is rolling out a major appliance upgrade initiative in public housing, replacing outdated, energy-hungry units with modern, efficient alternatives. The effort involves painstaking hands-on labor, with crews hauling heavy equipment through the cramped stairwells of aging pre-war buildings that lack elevators. The program aims to cut energy consumption and reduce utility costs for low-income residents who have long contended with inefficient infrastructure.

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DeSmog

Big Oil Knew It Was Wrecking Louisiana’s Coast, Records Show

Internal records reveal that oil companies were aware their operations were accelerating the destruction of Louisiana's coastal wetlands, even as they continued drilling. The findings add to a growing body of evidence that the industry prioritized profit while knowingly contributing to one of the most severe land-loss crises in the United States. For Louisiana, which loses a football field of coastline roughly every 100 minutes, the revelations carry significant legal and political weight.

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