National TV news provided extensive and often empathetic coverage of the Texas floods, explaining how and why the flooding occurred, documenting rescue efforts, and honoring the lives lost, including children, with sustained attention. That depth of coverage created space for more discussions about preparedness and systemic risk, though climate contextualization remained inconsistent.
On cable, CNN aired 24 hours and 21 minutes of coverage across 350 segments about the flooding, with 14 climate mentions, and MSNBC aired 7 hours and 29 minutes across 107 segments with 10 climate mentions. Fox News aired 11 hours and 35 minutes across 34 segments with 7 climate mentions, all of which denied or downplayed the role global warming played in amplifying the Central Texas flooding event.
On corporate broadcast networks, ABC aired 1 hour and 17 minutes across 27 segments with no climate mentions, CBS aired 55 minutes across 21 segments with 1 climate mention, and NBC aired 1 hour and 6 minutes across 22 segments, with no climate mentions.
Analysis of TV coverage of Central Texas flooding
Only 5% of national TV news segments about the Texas floods explicitly mentioned climate change. But that figure doesn’t capture the full shape of how climate discussion surfaced during the coverage — unlike previous events such as the June heat dome, when climate and disaster preparedness were largely ignored, the Texas flood prompted a more layered narrative.
Climate change discussions emerged at key moments across CNN and MSNBC in particular, often embedded in expert interviews, policy discussions, or segments examining the region’s potentially degraded disaster response capacity and rising flood risk. These segments were not always framed as climate stories, but they did reflect a meaningful shift: mentions of climate change often surfaced when it was materially relevant to explaining impacts, risks, or failures in the catastrophic Texas flooding.
Dozens of segments raised concerns about the Trump administration’s proposed elimination of FEMA, cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and National Weather Service, and staffing shortages in emergency forecasting offices. In the vast majority of cases, these concerns were raised with caution, avoiding speculation about direct causality in the immediate aftermath of the disaster while still making clear the stakes of institutional disinvestment.
These critiques often ran parallel to climate framing, pointing toward a broader reckoning with institutional vulnerability in an era of more intense and less predictable climate-driven disasters.
Broadcast coverage, by contrast, remained focused on the immediate situation in Texas: the scale of the destruction, the storm mechanics, and the rescue response. Several segments referenced the National Weather Service in the context of warning timelines, but structural critiques — including agency staffing, preparedness failures, and federal disinvestment — were never incorporated into corporate broadcast coverage. Climate change was mentioned only once, briefly, across all three broadcast networks (the reference aired on CBS).
The recent Texas flooding revealed the potential for TV news networks to connect extreme weather events to stories of deeper systemic vulnerability, even if their coverage of that connection remains uneven, cautious, and far from complete.
Cable news hosted several notable segments
More than 100 segments across CNN and MSNBC mentioned the Trump administration's cuts to the National Weather Service and proposed elimination of FEMA. While some of these were brief or routine references during White House correspondent reports, others engaged more directly with the risks posed by weakened federal disaster infrastructure — linking staffing shortages, degraded forecasting capacity, and proposed budget cuts to broader questions of national preparedness — without drawing direct lines to the Texas flood itself.
Although climate change was rarely the central focus, many of the best segments grounded their reporting in the practical consequences of a warming atmosphere, particularly examining how extreme rainfall can overwhelm underfunded early warning systems and emergency management networks.
For example, CNN national security analyst Juliette Kayyem appeared across multiple segments framing the Texas floods as not just a climate-influenced disaster but a stress test of national resilience and a potential warning about the downstream effects of disaster policy retrenchment during the Trump administration.
These points were echoed across several notable segments on cable news.
During the July 6 episode of CNN Newsroom Live, Kristina Dahl of the Union of Concerned Scientists explained how global warming increases rainfall intensity and warned that vacancies in key forecasting positions, such as warning coordination meteorologists, could impair local emergency response and erode the national early warning system.