The biggest earthquake in Taiwan in at least 25 years managed to take nine lives on Wednesday and injure more than 900 people.
Experts labelled this eruption as the “worst-case scenario,” exacerbated by the failure of defences constructed after a previous eruption in December.
The managing director of Working on Fire said that 2023 was “the year of the planet burning, both figuratively and literally”.
Shocking footage is making its way around social media, showing steam rising from the large gashes in roads and sidewalks.
It looks like a total hellscape. If this doesn’t make people realise climate catastrophe is happening now, then I don’t know what will.
In the wake of the tragedy, Maui’s residents are grappling with the immense loss and the rebuilding process. While questions remain about the timeline for recovery and reconstruction, the resolute spirit of the community remains unbroken.
Amidst these harrowing scenes, a resounding call to take action over climate change echoes louder than ever.
Footage of the dangerous scenes in China keeps rolling in, as many residents begin to express their fear and anger around the government’s lack of preparation for the typhoon’s impact.
“Can you f—ing believe what just happened to us?” said a Florida deputy to the motorist that he tried to save before they were both swept into a drain pipe under a massive highway.
“Eish, from a dead sleep to rock and roll,” someone in Johannesburg recalls of the 4,7 magnitude earthquake that hit the East Rand in Johannesburg on Sunday morning.
Deep wafts of wildfire smoke in Canada have been drifting around the region, swallowing whole cities in a thick, yellow haze like something from an apocalypse movie.
The Mount Vesuvius eruption that buried Pompeii under a blanket of hot ash in 79 AD has always held a morbid fascination for historians.
That’s the alarming thing – as the climate crisis ramps up, we’re going to see more and more videos of terrifying tornadoes ripping into city after city.
It is understood that the dam can typically contain an overflow of up to 115%, and as it stands, the dam is 120% full.
Every so often, one comes across a story that sounds so far-fetched it can’t possibly be true. Then you look a little closer, realise that it took place in the Midwestern United States, and it sort of makes sense.
In just a couple of days, with extreme bouts of torrential rain, the death toll soared past 1 100 and water overwhelmed as much as a third of the country, satellite images show.
Remarkably, the British tourist and his fellow trekkers came out unscathed after a massive avalanche raced over them from the mountains they were just about to climb.
The doccie has already received Oscar buzz and has been referred to as the “greatest lava story ever told” and “hands down, the documentary of the year”.
China has been dealing with one of its more devastating rainy seasons, with two vicious tornadoes tearing through the south in a matter of days.
People across the province are contending with heavy downpours, flooded streets, mudslides, and structural collapses.
A 57-year-old Tongan man has been hailed as a “real-life Aquaman” for his seemingly impossible swim to safety.
Families and friends touring the Furnas lake in Brazil can be heard screaming as a portion of the rocky canyon wall toppled onto two of the boats in the water below.
Kentucky’s governor said that there will likely be more than 100 lives lost from the immense tornadoes that ripped through the state.
A severe storm brought torrential rainfall, violent winds, an impressive waterspout, and even a tornado to the Italian town of Sicily.
Footage has been shared from an ocean drone inside a major hurricane moving across the Atlantic Ocean.
Despite the grave danger of the situation on the island of La Palma, Spanish tourism minister Reyes Maroto is encouraging tourists to pop by for a visit.
Videos of mysterious bright lights flashing over Acapulco appeared on social media, and scientists are still divided as to the exact reason.
Mark Kobylinksi stood rapt with his camera in hand, on his back deck, watching as the nightmare drew closer and closer.
Local government said that the blast, which erupted in an area full of oil and gas fields, was caused by a mud volcano 75 kilometres off the coast of Baku.
Last week, an intense tornado killed five people, injured hundreds more, and left whole towns ravaged across the Czech Republic.