Extreme weather drives up food, insurance costs, turning climate change into a new inflation driver. Bloomberg reports that price pressures from climate-related events are becoming persistent.
Extreme weather is driving up prices from food to insurance, making climate change a new and growing source of inflation, according to a report.
What happened
Extreme weather is driving up prices from food to insurance, making climate change a new and growing source of inflation, according to a report.
Quick reaction
One tap helps tune what we surface next.
Reader discussion
Public commentsNo comments yet. Start the discussion around this signal.
Follow this signal
Get updates on this story
We will email you if this changes materially. No spam. Daily brief optional.
Map context
See this on the live map
Keep the story in context with nearby live signals, countries, and category movement.
Related coverage
More story pages
Foreign investors now hold more U.S. government debt than foreign central banks for first time ever
For the first time ever, foreign investors now hold more U.S. government debt than foreign central banks.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell holds final press conference, ending an era of monetary policy leadership.
Jerome Powell held his final press conference as Federal Reserve chair, marking the end of an era.
US consumer sentiment hits record low, University of Michigan survey shows, as inflation and gas prices strain Americans
Consumer sentiment in the US fell to its lowest level on record, according to the University of Michigan's survey released Friday, as inflation and higher gas prices continue to weigh on Americans.
US Treasury says no plans to renew waiver for Russian oil at sea, AP reports.
The US Treasury stated that it has no plans to renew the waiver for Russian oil at sea, according to AP.
More live signals
Continue with the live feed.
The fastest nearby updates load from the public feed, not the enriched story endpoint.