Morning Overview

Author

Everett Sloane

Latest Articles by Everett Sloane

Severe thunderstorms roll into central Oklahoma tonight with EF-2+ tornadoes possible — Mother’s Day morning storms follow

Mayon volcano has displaced 200,000 people across the Philippines as lava flows reach 3.8 km and ash blankets 87 villages in total darkness

The worst spring drought in U.S. history has burned 1.85 million acres already — double the 10-year average with summer still ahead

Severe storms threaten 10 million across Oklahoma and North Texas this weekend with EF-2+ tornadoes, golf-ball hail, and 70 mph winds

Super El Niño is now 100% likely on European models and could shatter the 1877 record — forecasters warn of a ‘code red’ atmosphere

India fires a nuclear missile that splits into multiple warheads in mid-flight — each one hitting a different target 5,000 km away

3 hikers killed after climbing a restricted Indonesian volcano to film content — 17 others rescued from 10 km ash cloud

14 tornadoes ripped through Mississippi in a single night — two long-track EF3s injured 13 and damaged 500 homes

Fires in 2026 have already burned 1.6 million acres by early April — more than double the 10-year average before summer begins

A March heat wave made worse by climate change further depleted an already dismal snowpack across the entire western U.S.

Oregon’s governor declares an early and prolonged wildfire season from June through October as drought enters its worst phase

The DOE awards $2.7 billion in contracts for enriched uranium — a historic investment in domestic nuclear fuel capacity

Scientists use sunlight to turn plastic waste into clean hydrogen fuel — solving two problems with one reaction

El Niño is likely to emerge by July and persist through 2026 — setting up 2027 for potentially record-shattering global temperatures

Solar and wind are both expected to surpass nuclear power globally in 2026 as battery storage fills the intermittency gap

The first 3 months of 2026 were the driest on record for the lower 48 — receiving only 70% of average precipitation

1 32 33 34 35 36 214