#ExtremeHeatwaves

2025-04-30

“Splendour in the Mud”:
Climate breakdown and car dependency put an end to commercial drive-in music activities

A “report found 85% of festivalgoers had been affected by either floods, storms, heatwaves or the threat of bushfires at an event they had attended in the past 12 months.”

The “Splendour in the Mud” festival left tens of thousands of motorists bogged and stranded in torrential rain. Extreme heat from greenhouse gas emission is also eliminating the ‘drive-in’ model for outdoor mass gatherings.
>>
theguardian.com/music/2025/apr

The end of the car dependent music festival? >>
news.griffith.edu.au/2024/08/2
#ClimateBreakdown #GHG #cars #traffic #congestion #CarDependency #FossilFuels #harm #DriveIn #MassGatherings #industry #festivals #NoisePollution #EnvironmentalDamage #soil #RiskManagement #PublicHealth #PublicSafety #outdoor #ExternalisedCosts #TheGreatOutdoors #ExtremeHeatwaves #floods #storms #splendour

2025-04-02

Understanding the health impacts of the climate crisis
and imagining a positive future

"Climate change is the greatest threat to human health now."

"Climate change is already causing significant shifts in weather patterns and an increase in extreme weather events around the world, including droughts, heatwaves, wildfires, storms and floods."

"The major cause of pollution is the burning of fossil fuels, further motivating action on reducing GHG; adverse weather events, such as heatwaves, can acutely amplify pollution impacts."
>>
sciencedirect.com/science/arti
#climate #FossilFuels #meat #food #water #insecurity #mentalhealth #neurology #ClimateBreakdown #ExtremeHeatwaves #drought #bushfires #floods #pollution #pesticides #InfectiousDiseases #mortality #restoration #biosphere #inaction #governance

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2514664525000190
2025-04-01

Economic vulnerabilities to climate change
Average person will be 40% poorer if world warms by 4C, new research shows

“In a hotter future, we can expect cascading supply chain disruptions triggered by extreme weather events worldwide. New research had looked at the likely impact of global heating of 4C – seen by many climate experts as catastrophic for the planet – finding it would make the average person 40% poorer."
>>
theguardian.com/environment/20
#climate #pollution #droughts #floods #ExtremeHeatwaves #SupplyChains #ClimateBreakdown #mortality

2025-02-08

Trees cool by 2°C

"The temperature reduction caused by green infrastructure in normal summer conditions is around 1 – 2°C during the day."
unsw.edu.au/newsroom/news/2024
#trees #FossilFuels #ClimateBreakdown #ExtremeHeatwaves #vegetation #UHI

The surface temperature under trees was very cool, while the human infrastructure: grass, bitumen and cement was burning hot. NSW coast
2025-02-08

Bitumen road interface with concrete and crumbling plastic near ocean

#roads #footpaths #plastic #microplastics #UHI #PermeablePaving #NSW #ocean #runoff #stormwater #pollution #climate #ExtremeHeatwaves

Bitumen road interface with concrete and crumbling plastic near ocean, NSW Mid North coast
2025-01-06

A rapidly changing climate

"We need to cut greenhouse gas emissions as quickly as possible. Every tonne of greenhouse gas we do not release now will help reduce future heatwaves, floods and droughts...The real question isn’t if we should do something about it — it’s how quickly we still can." >>
theconversation.com/relentless
#FossilFuels #GHG #pollution #droughts #water #heatwaves #floods #ExtremeHeatwaves

2024-12-16

"Since 1900, heatwaves have killed more people in Australia than floods, fires, and all the other disasters put together. Extreme heat is often called the silent killer. It’s the deadliest of natural disasters."
>>
abc.net.au/news/2024-12-17/hea
#FossilFuels #GHG #emissions #harm #ClimateBreakdown #heatwave #ExtremeHeat #ExtremeHeatwaves #habitability #HabitableClimate #disasters

2024-11-28

Unexplained #HeatWave#Hotspots’ Are Popping Up Across the Globe

Kevin Krajick
November 26, 2024

"Earth’s hottest recorded year was 2023, at 2.12 degrees F above the 20th-century average. This surpassed the previous record set in 2016. So far, the 10 hottest yearly average temperatures have occurred in the past decade. And, with the hottest summer and hottest single day, 2024 is on track to set yet another record.

"All this may not be breaking news to everyone, but amid this upward march in average temperatures, a striking new phenomenon is emerging: distinct regions are seeing repeated heat waves that are so extreme, they fall far beyond what any model of global warming can predict or explain. A new study provides the first worldwide map of such regions, which show up on every continent except Antarctica like giant, angry skin blotches. In recent years these heat waves have killed tens of thousands of people, withered crops and forests, and sparked devastating wildfires.

"'The large and unexpected margins by which recent regional-scale extremes have broken earlier records have raised questions about the degree to which climate models can provide adequate estimates of relations between global mean temperature changes and regional climate risks,' says the study.

"'This is about extreme trends that are the outcome of physical interactions we might not completely understand,' said lead author Kai Kornhuber, an adjunct scientist at the Columbia Climate School’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. 'These regions become temporary hothouses.' Kornhuber is also a senior research scholar at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria.

"The study was just published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences."

"The study looks at heat waves over the past 65 years, identifying areas where extreme heat is accelerating considerably faster than more moderate temperatures. This often results in maximum temperatures that have been repeatedly broken by outsize, sometimes astonishing, amounts. For instance, a nine-day wave that hammered the U.S. Pacific Northwest and southwestern Canada in June 2021 broke daily records in some locales by 30 degrees C, or 54 F. This included the highest ever temperature recorded in Canada, 121.3 F, in Lytton, British Columbia. The town burned to the ground the next day in a wildfire driven in large part by the drying of vegetation in the extraordinary heat. In Oregon and Washington state, hundreds of people died from heat stroke and other health conditions.

"These extreme heat waves have been hitting predominantly in the last five years or so, though some occurred in the early 2000s or before. The most hard-hit regions include populous central China, Japan, Korea, the Arabian peninsula, eastern Australia and scattered parts of Africa. Others include Canada’s Northwest Territories and its High Arctic islands, northern Greenland, the southern end of South America and scattered patches of Siberia. Areas of Texas and New Mexico appear on the map, though they are not at the most extreme end.

"According to the report, the most intense and consistent signal comes from northwestern Europe, where sequences of heat waves contributed to some 60,000 deaths in 2022 and 47,000 deaths in 2023. These occurred across Germany, France, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and other countries. Here, in recent years, the hottest days of the year are warming twice as fast the summer mean temperatures. The region is especially vulnerable in part because, unlike places like the United States, few people have air conditioning, because traditionally it was almost never needed. The outbreaks have continued. In September, new maximum temperature records were set in Austria, France, Hungary, Slovenia, Norway and Sweden. Well into October, many parts of the U.S. Southwest and California saw record temperatures for the month more typical of midsummer.

"The researchers call the statistical trends 'tail-widening'―that is, the anomalous occurrence of temperatures at the far upper end, or beyond, anything that would be expected with simple upward shifts in mean summer temperatures. But the phenomenon is not happening everywhere; the study shows that maximum temperatures across many other regions are actually lower than what models would predict. These include wide areas of the north-central United States and south-central Canada, interior parts of South America, much of Siberia, northern Africa and northern Australia. Heat is increasing in these regions as well, but the extremes are increasing at similar or lower speed than what changes in average would suggest.

"Climbing overall temperatures make heat waves more likely in many cases, but the causes of the extreme heat outbreaks are not entirely clear. In Europe and Russia, an earlier study led by Kornhuber blamed heat waves and droughts on wobbles in the jet stream, a fast-moving river of air that continuously circles the northern hemisphere. Hemmed in by historically frigid temperatures in the far north and much warmer ones further south, the jet stream generally confines itself to a narrow band. But the Arctic is warming on average far more quickly than most other parts of the Earth, and this appears to be destabilizing the jet stream, causing it to develop so-called Rossby waves, which suck hot air from the south and park it in temperate regions that normally do not see extreme heat for days or weeks at a time."

Read more:
news.climate.columbia.edu/2024

#RossbyWaves #Rossby #GlobalWarming #GlobalBurning #Wildfires #GlobalHotSpots #Heatwaves #ExtremeHeat #ClimateChange #ExtremeHeatwaves #ExtremeWeather

Global map of air currents that cause heat waves.
A map of the northern hemisphere, with "sine waves" running through it. There are red spots in some of the waves, including the midwestern US and Canada, Europe and the UK, and parts of Russia, Kazakhstan and Iran.

Text: "Researchers have identified meanders in the northern hemisphere jet stream that can suck hot air from the south and cause massive heat waves across widespread regions of North America and Eurasia. This image comes from a 2020 study. (Kornhuber et al., Nature Climate Change, 2020)"A map of the world with blotches of red and green.

Text: "Regions where observed heat waves exceed trends from climate models. Boxed areas with the darkest red colors are the most extreme; lesser reds and oranges exceed models, but not by as much. Yellows roughly match models, while greens and blues are below what models would project. (Adapted from Kornhuber et al., PNAS 2024)"
2024-11-28

Global emergence of regional heatwave hotspots outpaces climate model simulations

"Heatwaves can lead to considerable impacts on societal and natural systems....Our findings highlight the need to better understand and model extreme heat and to rapidly mitigate greenhouse gas emissions to avoid further harm."
>>
K. Kornhuber, S. Bartusek, R. Seager, H.J. Schellnhuber, M. Ting, Global emergence of regional heatwave hotspots outpaces climate model simulations, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 121 (49) e2411258121,
doi.org/10.1073/pnas.241125812 (2024).
#heatwave #GHG #emissions #ExtremeHeat #ExtremeHeatwaves #ClimateBreakdown #FossilFuels #harm

2024-11-18

Heat kills
"Analyses are stark evidence of how global heating is already supercharging deadly weather beyond anything ever experienced by humanity. The impossible heatwaves have taken lives across North America, Europe and Asia, with scientific analyses showing that they would have had virtually zero chance of happening without the extra heat trapped by fossil fuel emissions."
>>
theguardian.com/environment/20
#FossilFuels #ClimateBreakdown #ExtremeHeat #ExtremeHeatwaves #AttributionSci #livability

2024-06-23

"Despite Australia’s many extreme weather events, such as floods, just 60% of Australians accept that climate disruption is human-caused, according to an international poll."

theguardian.com/environment/ar
#Australia #climate #ClimateDenial #FossilFuels #pollution #denial #coal #power #BlackSummer #BushFires #ExtremeHeatwaves #science #literacy

2024-05-03

Habitat and water stations for koalas

"At the Port Macquarie Koala Hospital in New South Wales, about 200 koalas pass through the facility every year. That’s down from around 300 in previous years. “There are just fewer koalas now,” says Cheyne Flanagan, clinical director at the hospital.""

In Bellingen you fall over dog bowls full of water everywhere, but where are the maintained water stations for koalas?
>>
therevelator.org/koalas-declin
#koalas #TheGreatKoalaNationalPark #sprawl #cars #roads #dogs #pets #LoggingIndustry #ClimateBreakdown #ExtremeHeatwaves

2024-04-09

"Weak government climate policies violate fundamental human rights, the European court of human rights has ruled."
>>
theguardian.com/environment/20

AU "Government respondents ... reported being constrained in commenting on logging and climate change. We are often forbidden (from) talking about the true impacts of, say, a threatening process […] especially if the government is doing little to mitigate the threat […] In this way the public often remains ‘in the dark’ about the true state and trends of many species."
>>
theconversation.com/research-r

#ClimateCrisis #litigation #FossilFuels #ExtremeHeatwaves #ParisAgreement #HumanRights #governance #inaction #EU #law #biodiversity #LoggingImpacts #ScienceSuppression

2024-02-28

The fossil fuel profit machine
and a cooked planet

World’s largest oil companies have made $281bn profit since invasion of Ukraine
"Last year was the hottest year on record by a huge margin, driving heatwaves, floods and wildfires, damaging lives and livelihoods across the world."
theguardian.com/business/2024/

What we know about last year’s top 10 wild Australian climatic events – from fire and flood combos to cyclone-driven extreme rain
theconversation.com/what-we-kn

The State of Weather and Climate Extremes 2023
More than 30 of Australia’s leading climate scientists released a report analysing ten major weather events in 2023, from early fires to low snowpack to compound events.
climateextremes.org.au/the-sta
#FossilFuels #industry #climate #ExtremeHeatwaves #extreme #bushfires #ClimateActionNow

2024-01-11

“Heatwaves have killed more people in Australia than any other natural hazard...Heatwaves have already increased in intensity, frequency and duration in Australia, with projections suggesting this trend will continue as the planet continues to warm from the burning of fossil fuels."

"Naming heatwaves ... created accountability around the actions that communities and government agencies needed to take to protect the public at a time when global heating was increasing the threat."

2024 - "Fossil Fuels 50.7 °C" ?
2025 - ....................................

theguardian.com/australia-news
#ExtremeHeatwaves #ThermalLimits #FossilFuels #heatwaves #climate

100+ Zombie #BCwildfires 🔥​🌳​🔥​ still burning in British Columbia in January 2024?

This could point to an even hotter 2024, potentially breaking record-breaking destruction of 2023.

For 🇨🇦​, Environment and Climate Change Canada is projecting about 70% above-normal temperatures in April through June 2024.

Below-normal snowpacks = drier conditions for Summer.

Will we have enough clean drinking water? Or, will that be used for fracking for LNG?

#extremeheatwaves

cbc.ca/news/canada/wildfire-pr

2024-01-10

"The record set in 2023 was not surprising: “Every year for the rest of your life will be one of the hottest [on] record. This in turn means that 2023 will end up being one of the coldest years of this century. Enjoy it while it lasts.”

theguardian.com/environment/20
#FossiFuels #cars #SUVs #heatwaves #ExtremeHeatwaves #ClimateCrisis #4°CWorld #DeathValley #landscaping #succulents

Bellingen prepares for a 54.4°C Death Valley climate with appropriate landscaping:

2023-12-13

There goes the roast beef for Christmas dinner
right through Bellingen main drag.
Just after the cows cooked on tree-less paddocks in extreme heat.

Stressed cows foaming at the mouth, screaming at 32 °C,
while 'al fresco' society is unperturbed by the double decker trucks rushing by.

But the stench of excrements and fear stays.
Animal welfare ends with dogs and cats around here.

Sirens of the lambs , Banksy
youtube.com/watch?v=WDIz7mEJOe

The idea of "climate-friendly beef" is as absurd as "clean coal". The Comforting Lie of Climate-Friendly Meat
newrepublic.com/article/177575
#cattle #cows #food #meat #livestock #transport #Hydest #Bellingen #AnimalWellbeing #ExtremeHeatwaves #climate

Cattle transport, Hyde street, BellingenCow foaming at 32C transport, Bellingen
2023-12-08

The impacts of extreme heat events on wildlife
How koalas are trying to cope

Temperatures are predicted to swelter above 40 degrees today in NSW. People are retreating into their coal-fired AC houses and AC combustion boxes. Dogs are offered drinking bowls at almost every door in Bellingen, but Australian animals are out there in a degraded landscape having to deal with the extreme heat we generate.

Koalas are "using a tree species they don't feed on ... [hugging] the main trunks of trees and lower to the ground. We came up with the idea they were losing heat to the tree trunks. I found a colleague with a fancy thermal camera and went out in hot weather and it's exactly what they were doing. By pressing their body into the coolest tree they could find, the koalas halved their need to drink water in heatwaves. Hugging trees may not be enough for koalas to maintain their already dwindling distribution with rising average temperatures."

Stop fossil fuels consumption
Put out fresh water for wildlife
>>
abc.net.au/news/science/2023-1
#ExtremeHeatwaves #FossilFuels #wildlife #Koalas #Bellingen #StopLogging #NativeForests

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