Tue, 21-Oct-2025

African heatwave’s deadly toll directly linked to Global Warming

African heatwave's deadly toll directly linked to Global Warming

Last month, temperatures in Mali soared above 48C, leading to hundreds of deaths. Human activities, such as burning fossil fuels, elevated temperatures by up to 1.4C above normal levels. A separate study attributed drought in Southern Africa to El Niño, not climate change. Scientists assert that human-induced climate change rendered a deadly heatwave in West … Read more

God Flower fades: Climate change threatens Tsou Tribe’s vital orchid

God Flower fades: Climate change threatens Tsou Tribe's vital orchid

Climate change threatens the Tsou tribe’s sacred “God Flower.” God Flower is crucial for Tsou ceremonies and connection to the divine. Tsou tribe faces loss of traditions and cultural identity. The ever-worsening effects of climate change have driven the Dendrobium orchid, also known as the golden grass orchid, or “God Flower,” to the brink of … Read more

The world is now entering an era of ‘global boiling’: says UN chief

global boiling

Guterres expressed deep concern about the current state of climate change. He called on political leaders to take immediate and decisive action to combat climate change. Stressed that there is no room for hesitancy, excuses, or waiting for others to act first. UN Secretary-General António Guterres declared that the era of global warming has come … Read more

Michael Gove warns against treating climate change as ‘Religious Crusade’

Michael Gove warns against treating climate change as 'Religious Crusade'

British Housing Minister Michael Gove warned against viewing the fight. He supported initiatives to promote walking and cycling. The ruling Conservatives narrowly won a vote opposing levies. Days after the ruling Conservatives narrowly won a vote by opposing levies for the most polluting vehicles, British Housing Minister Michael Gove issued a warning on Sunday about … Read more

Greenland temperatures haven’t been this warm in at least 1,000 years

Greenland
  • The climate crisis has impacted the island country over time.
  • Melting ice has a significant global impact.
  • The average temperature between 2001 and 2011 was 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Scientists are piecing together Greenland‘s history by drilling ice cores to analyze how the climate crisis has impacted the island country over time as humans fiddle with the planet’s thermostat. The deeper they drilled, the further back in time they went, allowing them to distinguish which temperature fluctuations were natural and which were caused by humans.

After years of studying the Greenland ice sheet, scientists reported Wednesday in the journal Nature that temperatures there have been the warmest in at least the last 1,000 years – the longest time period for which their ice cores could be analyzed. And they discovered that the average temperature between 2001 and 2011 was 1.5 degrees Celsius higher than it was during the twentieth century.

Human-caused climate change, according to the report’s authors, has played a significant role in the dramatic rise in temperatures in the critical Arctic region, where melting ice has a significant global impact.

“Greenland is currently the largest contributor to sea level rise,” said Maria Hörhold, lead author of the study and a glaciologist at the Alfred Wegener Institute. “And if we continue at our current rate of carbon emissions, Greenland will have contributed up to 50 centimeters to sea level rise by 2100, affecting millions of people who live in coastal areas.”

Global warming

“If you’re going to say something is global warming, you have to know what the natural variation was before humans interacted with the atmosphere,” she says. “You have to go back in time, to the pre-industrial era, when humans did not emit [carbon dioxide] into the atmosphere.”

There were no weather stations in Greenland that collected temperature data like today during pre-industrial times. That is why the scientists studied the region’s warming patterns using paleoclimate data, such as ice cores. According to Hörhold, the last robust ice core analysis in Greenland ended in 1995, and that data did not detect warming despite climate change already being visible elsewhere.

“By extending the period to 2011, we can show that, ‘Well, there is actually warming,'” she added. “The warming trend has been present since 1800, but it has been hidden by strong natural variability.”

Scientists believe that significant warming in Greenland’s ice sheet is approaching a tipping point that could result in catastrophic melting. According to NASA, Greenland has enough ice to raise global sea levels by about 24 feet if it all melted.

Since then, Greenland has experienced extreme weather. In 2019, an unusually warm spring and a July heat wave caused almost the entire surface of the ice sheet to melt, releasing approximately 532 billion tonnes of ice into the sea. As a result, scientists predicted that the global sea level would rise by 1.5 millimeters.

Then, in 2021, rain fell for the first time on record at Greenland’s summit – roughly two miles above sea level. The warm air then fueled an extreme rain event, dumping 7 billion tonnes of water on the ice sheet, enough to fill Washington, DC’s National Mall’s Reflecting Pool nearly 250,000 times.

Because extreme events in Greenland are becoming more common, Hörhold said the team will continue to monitor the situation.

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Europe and the polar areas will experience the brunt of the warming

Europe

The Polar Regions and Europe experienced the most effects of global warming in 2022. The third consecutive year of the La Nia weather event helped to cool the waters. Temperatures in Europe have risen more than twice as much as the rest of the world. The Polar Regions and Europe experienced the most effects of … Read more

‘Warming Stripes’ are the new symbol of global warming

Warming Stripes

This graphic was made by British climatologist Ed Hawkins, who is a professor at the University of Reading. These ‘climate stripes’ show how global temperatures have risen over the past 200 years. You’ve probably already seen them on a sign at a climate march, on TV, on a US senator’s badge, at Fashion Week, or … Read more

Key takeaways from COP27 climate summit

cop27 key takeaways

Nations agreed to establish a fund to compensate developing nations for “loss and destruction.” The continued usage of fossil fuels was reaffirmed. Brazil joined Indonesia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in creating a forest protection collaboration. China and the U.S. agreed to resume cooperation on climate change after a hiatus caused by Taiwan … Read more

Countries need $2tn annually to address climate issue

climate issue

Developing and rising countries must spend $2 trillion yearly by 2030 to avert global warming. Private and public sources must provide the remaining $1.4 trillion. Britain and Egypt are hosting COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh this week. A UN-backed analysis says developing and rising countries excluding China require spending well beyond $2 trillion yearly by 2030 … Read more

EU reaches deal to ban CO2-emitting cars by 2035

european union

Negotiators reached an agreement on legislation to phase out new CO2-emitting vehicles by 2035. There is an exemption for “niche” producers who produce less than 10,000 automobiles annually The decision was “extremely far-reaching,” according to Oliver Zipse, CEO of BMW. Negotiators stated that the European Union has reached an agreement on legislation to phase out … Read more

Boost climate action or we’ll see you court, activists warn governments

climate actions

Environmental groups say they have already initiated more than 80 legal actions to “compel” governments from the Netherlands to Brazil. Analysis: A quarter of the roughly 2,000 climate-related court claims filed since 1986 have been initiated since the start of 2020. And this will continue if they do not use the upcoming United Nations COP … Read more

China issues a warning about its rapid temperature rise relative to the world average.

China’s average ground temperatures rise 0.26 degrees Celsius (0.47 degrees Fahrenheit) a decade since 1951, compared to the global average of 0.15 degrees. Changing weather patterns in China will affect the balance of water resources, make ecosystems more vulnerable, and reduce crop yields. According to a government official, China’s average ground temperatures have risen much … Read more

IPCC experts advise now or never to limit warming

IPCC experts advise now or never to limit warming

IPCC: “Now or never” time to take action to curb global warming. Global warming must stay below 1.5C this century. Carbon  emissions must be lowered “rapidly” IPCC has issued a dire warning to the scientific community that “now or never” is the time to take action to curb global warming. UN scientists announced a proposal … Read more

Heatwave grips Spain as France braces for soaring temperatures

France

Spain, and France to be hit by heatwave that could last until end of the week. Temperatures are expected to rise above 40 degrees Celsius. The decade from 2011 to 2020 was the warmest on record.   Spain was on Monday, gripped by a heatwave that was expected to reach “extreme” levels, with France following … Read more

Record low Antarctic sea ice extent could signal shift

Antarctic sea

Researchers revealed Tuesday that sea ice around Antarctica shrunk to its smallest area on record in February, five years after the previous record low, implying that Earth’s frozen continent may be less resistant to climate change than previously assumed.   According to a study published in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences, the ice-covered ocean … Read more

China govt to help run coal power plants at full capacity

coal and climate

BEIJING- China will help its coal-fired power plants run at full capacity, the government has announced, raising further alarm about the fate of Beijing’s climate pledges. Swathes of the world’s second-biggest economy were paralysed last year because of power shortages, partly caused by a drop in coal supply as global prices of the fossil fuel … Read more

Global warming hits Albanian migrant birds harder

flamingos

DIVJAKA, Albania – Thousands of migratory birds have failed to make their annual visit to Albania’s western coast this winter, experts say, pointing to climate change, overfishing and urbanisation as likely factors. The number of waterbirds recorded in January 2022 in the Divjaka-Karavasta wetlands, an internationally important wintering site along the European migratory flyway, was … Read more

PM Imran stresses need to control global warming for upcoming generations

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan has stressed the need to control global warming for our upcoming generations. The prime minister said this while speaking at an agreement signing ceremony held on Tuesday between Ministry of Climate Change and World Bank for the launch of “Green Stimulus – Turning Concept into Reality”. Under the agreement, the … Read more

Coal, an unavoidable pollutant in the harsh Afghan winter

Afghan winter

KABUL: At a Kabul market, coal is arriving by the tonne as the winter cold sets in. Even as prices rise, Afghans have a few options but to burn it for heat, creating some of the world’s most dangerous air. “Pollution causes serious respiratory diseases … All Afghans know what coal does,” customer Amanullah Daudzai, dressed … Read more

Climate on track to devastate world’s poorest economies: study

climate

GLASGOW: The 65 most vulnerable nations will see GDP drop 20 percent on average by 2050 and 64 percent by 2100 if the world heats up 2.9 degrees Celsius, according to a report released Monday at the COP26 climate talks in Glasgow. Even if global temperature rises are capped at 1.5C, in keeping with the most ambitious … Read more

Tidal Stream Power generates electricity and drives for Net-Zero

Tidal stream power generates the UK’s 11% of yearly electricity and plays a substantial part in the government’s drive for net-zero. Scientists in the UK have stated that connecting the power of the ocean’s tidal streams can deliver a probable and dependable means of assisting to meet the country’s future energy demand. On the other … Read more

UK accused of ‘staggering hypocrisy’ as political row stalks COP26

LONDON – “Shameless.” “Sleazy.” “Guilty.” British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faced damning headlines on Thursday that cast his government in a dismal light just as he browbeats world powers to show moral leadership over climate change. The government tore up the rulebook on how parliament polices ethical lapses by its members Wednesday, after an excoriating cross-party … Read more

‘Greenwashing’ or genuine?: Behind big business’ climate promises

climate

PARIS: As warnings have intensified about the massive damage that climate change will have on the world in the coming decades, big business has started to make commitments to reduce carbon emissions. But are these companies making a genuine attempt to fight global warming, or simply “greenwashing” their brands to try to divert criticism while … Read more

World leaders urged to ‘save humanity’ at climate summit

United Nations Chief

GLASGOW – World leaders must act to “save humanity”, UN chief Antonio Guterres said Monday as they met for the historic COP26 climate summit with code-red warnings from scientists ringing in their ears. More than 120 heads of state and government are gathering in Glasgow for a two-day summit at the start of the UN’s COP26 … Read more

China launches real-time glacier monitoring system

Antarctic sea

BEIJING — A real-time glacier monitoring system has been officially put into use on a glacier in the Yulong Snow Mountain in southwest China’s Yunnan Province, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). The system, jointly developed by the Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources of the CAS and the Wuhan University Chinese Antarctic … Read more

Zero net emissions by 2050: a huge challenge for airline industry

Zero net emissions by 2050: a huge challenge for airline industry

How can passengers take 10 billion flights a year without contributing to global warming? The question of “greening” the international aviation sector by 2050 constitutes a colossal task whose stakes — and sheer numbers — can make the head spin, according to the airlines themselves. At its general assembly in Boston Monday, the International Air … Read more

Global warming kills 14 percent of world’s corals in a decade

Global warming kills 14 percent of world's corals in a decade

Dynamite fishing and pollution — but mostly global warming — wiped out 14 percent of the world’s coral reefs from 2009 to 2018, leaving graveyards of bleached skeletons where vibrant ecosystems once thrived, according to the largest ever survey of coral health. Hardest hit were corals in South Asia and the Pacific, around the Arabian … Read more