Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Peter Dynes

Post image

Feb 2025: High pressure over the S. Atlantic brought scorching heat to South America. Rio Grande do Sul delayed school starts, while Rio de Janeiro hit 44°C (111°F)—the hottest in a decade. Check this GEOS map from Feb 17 showing temps over 38°C!

1 year ago 18 5 1 1
Post image

Studies predict that the #AMOC might collapse by 2050, potentially earlier. This change could lead to a significant drop in temperatures in the #UK, decreasing by 10°C on average. Such a shift could herald a new ice age for the area. Mitigation is urgent.

1 year ago 20 8 1 0
Post image

The heat in the tropics is currently deadly, with possible wet bulb temperatures being observed in parts of Western Africa at certain times of the day. Climate cooling mitigation is urgently needed before these regions become uninhabitable for extended periods of the year.

1 year ago 14 6 1 1
Post image

Dangerous heat in Brazil once again. Last year, they faced 8 severe heatwaves. This year, they’ve already endured 3—and it’s only Feb. The escalating heat crisis will have profound consequences for this country, the Amazon rainforest and the wider region.

1 year ago 31 19 2 0
Post image

The heat in India and Pakistan is staggering already, with some regions experiencing temperature anomalies as high as 16°C above normal. Heat seasons arrive earlier in this warming climate. In passing 1.5°C globally, the threat of lethal wet-bulb temps looms large here.

1 year ago 29 17 1 1
Post image

On its current trajectory, the world will experience at least 3°C of warming by the end of the century—within the lifetime of most children today.

🔥 3°C = an intolerable world, potential human extinction.

We must take urgent action to mitigate this catastrophic scenario.

1 year ago 29 14 4 2
Post image

While most are concentrating on the LA fires, etc., a sweltering heatwave is hitting South America. Santiago was forecasting a scorching 39°C, with surrounding areas and regions nearing 40°C and some places even higher

1 year ago 44 17 4 2
Advertisement
Post image

“Our monitoring has shown a significant increase in the area of mangroves that have lost their natural recovery capacity following recent hurricanes, such as Irma in 2017 and Ian in 2022,” said Zhe Zhu.

1 year ago 11 0 0 0
Video

Here is a fantastic model illustrating the protective role of mangroves

1 year ago 31 5 1 0
Post image

Mangroves in #Florida are losing their resilience, but they're vital for our coasts. These thick, natural buffers protect against coastal flooding, waves, storm surges, and tsunamis. The increasing frequency and intensity of storms are threatening their resilience.

1 year ago 22 5 3 0
Post image

It is remarkable to observe the substantial expenditure of fossil fuel energy and carbon in constructing infrastructures that, within this century, are predicted to be submerged due to rising sea levels. A huge waste of resources and a lack of strategic foresight. #ClimateChange

1 year ago 24 7 2 1