Wednesday, November 5, 2025

The deadly dust storms sweeping across the world

Dust storms are becoming more common globally, harming the health of millions of people. Now, scientists are racing to keep the dirt on the ground.

 by Erin Vivid Riley


 

"I couldn't see more than 50ft [15m] ahead," says Dave Dubois. "It was a once-in-a-decade type of storm."

In the spring of 2025, Dave Dubois, New Mexico State's climatologist, drove to a weather station a few hours north from his home in Las Cruces, a town on the edge of the Chihuahuan Desert in southern New Mexico. On the way, he passed the blistering sand dunes of White Sands National Park and the UFO hotbed of Roswell. While performing routine maintenance on a monitoring sensor, a powerful cloud of dust descended. The lack of visibility led to a terrifying pile-up on a major interstate, causing several injuries.

In the first three months of 2025, New Mexico saw 50 dust storms, with 18 March being the dustiest day on record. Accompanied by wildfires and wind gusts in excess of 70mph (113 km/h), the skies darkened as the "dusty inferno" spread across America.

Despite being sandwiched between Arizona and Texas, two states prone to dust storms, New Mexico sees fewer high-intensity events. But when intense winds blow across land parched by 25 years of climate change-amplified drought, "you have the perfect recipe," says Dubois.

 

The entire universe is made of dust, and it's always travelling, from star to star, from the sky to Earth, from Africa to the Amazon – Daniel Tong

The Chihuahan Desert event was triggered by a mid-latitude cyclone, a low-pressure storm system responsible for most of the severe weather events experienced at the ground level. The fallout from this dust storm extended across a huge area, with dirty rain reportedly falling as far away as Wisconsin and North Carolina. The cyclone also spawned dust storms in the greater southwest and southern Plains regions, tornadoes in the Southeast, wildfires in the South, blizzards in the Midwest, and heavy rains in the Northeast.

Similar to other extreme weather events, dust and sand storms are becoming more common. These events, exacerbated by climate change, whip up soil, sand and other particulates into veils of dirt that are often disruptive and sometimes deadly. They impact us in surprising ways, from affecting our health through the spread of diseases, such as meningitis, to influencing nature's water cycles, accelerating snowmelt by blanketing snow and causing it to thaw faster.

 Blinding dust can quickly reduce visibility, causing deadly traffic accidents (Credit: Alamy)

 Dust storms are a natural – and to an extent, beneficial – part of the Earth's climate and weather system, acting as a fertiliser for marine ecosystems. "The entire universe is made of dust, and it's always travelling, from star to star, from the sky to Earth, from Africa to the Amazon," says Daniel Tong, associate professor and atmospheric scientist at George Mason University in the US.

 

"People think that dust is just a part of the environment, part of the natural process," says Tong. "But it has a greater impact on the economy and public health than some better-known weather and climate disasters."

The race is now on to better understand these extreme weather events – and prevent some of them from happening.

The frequency of large dust storms in the southwestern US more than doubled from 1990 to 2011, according to a Noaa-led study. The same trend is apparent globally. The UN Environment Programme says in some areas desert dust increased twofold during the 20th Century. 

Many such areas are in the Middle East and North Africa, home to the Arabian and Sahara deserts. Although sand storms are typically limited to desert regions, climate experts say these areas are expanding due to increasing drought and desertification. Scientists estimate that the Sahara Desert, for example, has expanded by up to 18% over the past century.

The reach of these events is enormous. When the warm, dry Harmattan winds that blow over West Africa and the southwestern Sahara pick up between November and April, they transport desert dust as far as the Caribbean on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. Though the winds are a natural seasonal occurrence, desertification means they are able to move ever-growing quantities of dust. This past winter saw an increase, both in frequency and intensity, of Saharan dust storms across Europe and Latin America.

In March 2025, Dust streamed northeast across Texas and Oklahoma behind a line of thunderstorms (Credit: Nasa)

During a single week in April 2025, these storms left more than 1,000 people in central and southern Iraq suffering from respiratory issues. Similar storms that same month also prompted the cancellation of more than a thousand flights across both India and China. There were also cases of dust-pigmented "blood rain" in central Europe. 

According to the World Health Organization, 330 million people are exposed to particles transported by wind every day. Dust comprises some 40% of the aerosols, or tiny airborne particles, present in the lowest layer of Earth's atmosphere.

When people inhale these tiny grains, they can experience respiratory problems, such as asthma and pneumonia. Particulates can even cause severe heart and brain disease if they enter the bloodstream. A 2020 assessment linked a 15% increase in fine dust particle concentrations to a 24% increase in infant mortality rates across much of Africa.

Dust particles have also been found to carry diseases. In Sub-Saharan Africa's so-called "meningitis belt", which stretches from Senegal to Ethiopia, researchers have linked outbreaks of the disease's most dangerous form, a bacterial brain infection, with dusty and dry conditions. 

 

The mystery of 'valley fever' 

In the US, Tong and other researchers have also linked cases of "valley fever", an infection caused by a soil-dwelling fungus, to wind-borne dust particles. The fungus is most common to the southwestern US though it also exists in parts of Mexico as well as Central and South America. Exposure can cause symptoms of pneumonia. There are, on average, 10,000-20,000 reported cases of valley fever, and 200 deaths from the disease, in the US annually.

Scientists consider valley fever something of a mystery. "Previously, we thought it only lived in dry climates like Arizona, but a few years ago, it was found in the state of Washington," says Tong. "We don't know how widespread the fungus is, all the ways it's transmitted, or who is more susceptible."

In January, Tong and colleagues at the University of Texas at El Paso and the US Department of Agriculture, published a study that described the enormous economic toll of dust and wind storms. In compiling the cost across sectors such as agriculture and transportation, the researchers found that these events cost Americans $154bn (£115.5bn) each year.

"We were surprised to find that dust storms are actually more costly than other so-called billion-dollar climate disasters," says Tong. He highlighted the impact that dust can have on solar panels and wind turbines due to the fact that workers must frequently remove build-ups of grime from these installations. The paper by Tong and his colleagues also cited dust storms' economic impact on healthcare, estimating that valley fever alone results in about $2.7bn (£2bn) a year in medical costs.

 

There is also a risk that dust storms could worsen the effects of climate change. Snow and ice usually reflect between 50-90% of the solar radiation. However, when covered in dust or sand, they absorb more light and heat from the sun. A 2017 study found that the speed and volume of snowmelt runoff from the Rocky Mountains to the Colorado River is more impacted by dust than by rising spring temperatures. 

Climate change-fuelled drought, declining water resources, and harmful agricultural practices, such as overgrazing and tilling, play a critical role in driving an increase in dust storms. Tilling, for example, requires churning the top layer of soil to prepare it for a new crop. But this severs the soil's bonds and, during prolonged dry weather, turns it to dust.

 A dust storm sweeps over downtown Phoenix, Arizona (Credit: Alamy)

Excessive tilling was one cause of the 1930s Dust Bowl, a catastrophic period of severe dust storms in the US that transformed the country's heartland from a breadbasket to an arid and drought-stricken expanse. A 2021 paper estimates that more than one-third of the Corn Belt, a region of 30 million acres (12 million hectares) across the US Midwest, has lost much of its nutrient-rich topsoil due to erosion caused by tillage of the land.

In the decades since, less obtrusive farming approaches, referred to as conservation tillage, have gained popularity. This includes no-till farming, which involves planting directly into undisturbed soil. According to the US Department of Agriculture, nearly 87% of the country's farmland now employs some kind of conservation tillage, though continuous no-till – considered the best practice to combat erosion – accounts for only one-third of this total.

 

As for dust-prone areas that aren't farmland, reversing erosion often means working with landowners who may have conflicting priorities, as ecologists working in one of the nation's hot spots for dust-fatalities are finding.

Re-greening the land

In New Mexico's southwestern corner, not far from where Dubois encountered the spring storm, is Lordsburg Playa. The dry lake bed, once verdant ranching land, is now a source of dust storms in the Chihuahuan Desert. The 60 mile (97km) long playa has endured so much overgrazing, erosion and stretches of drought that even when rain does fall, the ground doesn't absorb it.

Since 2020, a group of ecologists have been gently treating a parcel of the playa so that it does accept water when it comes. The process involves using a specialised plow that loosens compact ground beneath the topsoil without disturbing its structure. A tool then releases a mix of native seeds, while an attached imprinter, or metal roller, creates deep depressions in the soil to capture water. 

Led by the New Mexico Department of Transportation (NMDOT), the team has treated a third of the 3,000-acre (1,214 hectares) area that's responsible for the most dust emissions impacting Interstate-10 (I-10). The highway is one of the country's main east-west arteries, with approximately 15,000 vehicles crossing the playa every day. Dust storms have caused at least 41 deaths along this stretch since 1967.

In addition to revegetation, NMDOT has also proposed treating a half-mile buffer zone along both sides of I-10 with proven measures, from adding check dams to stop sediment movement to creating large imprints to catch rainfall.

In New Mexico ecologists hope to reverse desertification (Credit: NMDOT Environmental)

In June, researchers at the University of Texas at El Paso conducted an analysis of 1,200 acres (486 hectares) that were plowed, imprinted and seeded in June 2022. Using satellite imagery, they compared the change in growth before treatment and three years later. The treated area saw a 41% increase in vegetation cover compared to a 4% increase in non-treated, grazed sections. Whether this vegetation growth has resulted in fewer dust storms, however, is yet to be determined.

In a separate study from March, researchers found that most growth occurred from seeds that were in the soil prior to the seeding. "They were simply waiting for the right conditions to germinate," says William Hutchinson, the roadside and community design manager for the Environmental Bureau at NMDOT. "Maybe we don't need to put seed down, which is expensive, and instead let nature take its way." 

The project's parcel is split among private landowners, the Bureau of Land Management, and the State Land Office. While the efficacy of the approach is clear, the politics in implementing it is less so, says Hutchinson. For the NMDOT, long-term mitigation means protecting revegetated areas from disturbance. For the other agencies, keeping the areas multi-use, per their mandates to maintain the land's commercial viability, means allowing cattle to graze on the growth that remains.

The recent analysis of vegetation cover also measured a third category – an untreated area protected from grazing – and found a 22% increase in vegetation cover, demonstrating the significant impact that cattle has on growth. The Bureau of Land Management is considering issuing conservation leases to NMDOT, which would allow the transportation agency to purchase certain plots for restoration and exclude grazing. 

 

"We are trying to balance the need to address a public health emergency with the need for, you know, 500 cows grazing out there," says Hutchinson about the dust-related fatalities on the I-10. "What's more important?"

Managing each source of dust will require navigating a distinct set of challenges. But most experts agree that these events becoming more common is a climate threat on par with wildfires, hurricanes and floods – and requires the same investment in mitigation.

William criticises Amazon deforestation crime in Brazil visit


 
Daniela Relph,Royal correspondent, Rio de Janeiro and
Hafsa Khalil
 
 

The Prince of Wales has criticised criminals involved in the deforestation in the Amazon rainforest, during a speech in Rio de Janeiro.

William was speaking at the United for Wildlife conference on Tuesday as part of his royal visit to Brazil.

"In the past year alone, over 1.7 million hectares of the Amazon were cleared across this region... much of which is driven by illicit activity," he told the audience.

Earlier, William visited the small Brazilian island of Paqueta - home to a population of just 4,000 - where he was greeted by dozens of people and given a baby to hold.

 

After a first day consisting of an official welcome with football in the Maracana Stadium and barefoot beach volleyball on Copacabana, the future king's second day in Brazil - and reason for visiting - was focused on the environment.

Hollywood star Leonardo Di Caprio recorded a video message at the summit, urging world leaders meeting in Brazil to "unite with courage and ambition".

Tuesday's wildlife summit organised by William - the first of its kind - highlighted the damage caused by environmental crime, and the prince announced a new fund for wildlife rangers.

William described Latin America as a "global leader in biodiversity and environmental conservation".

He criticised deforestation linked to criminal gangs, saying: "This crime fuels violence and corruption, distorts legitimate economies, and negatively impacts the livelihoods of millions."

But he ended on an optimistic note: "We must stand alongside those who everyday are standing up and defending nature.

"We must recognise and celebrate these protectors, not just in words but through our actions. And we must act together."

Prince William is in Brazil to present the Earthshot Prize, the annual award from the charity he set up, on Wednesday.

He is also scheduled to give a speech at COP30, the UN's annual climate meeting where governments discuss how to limit and prepare for further climate change, the following day.

Many of Paqueta's residents came to see the prince and grab a photo with him

Earlier on Tuesday he was taken by a Brazilian navy boat to the island of Paqueta, known for producing the West Ham and Brazil footballer, Lucas Paqueta.

During a walkabout in the harbour, 10-month-old Joaquim Monteiro was thrust into his arms.

"Mustn't drop him," joked the father of three as he gave Joaquim a cuddle before handing him back to his grandparents.

Andre Luis Junior, the baby's cousin and a teacher, said: "We are so happy he chose this very small island.

"We're very unique in the heart of Rio. Very quiet. We love that he chose to come here. The kids in school were so excited today."

Ten-month-old Joaquim Monteiro was thrust into the prince's arms

Just an hour away from Rio de Janeiro by boat, Paqueta is an escape from the intensity of the city.

Cars are not allowed on the island with all travel is done on foot, by car or in carriages.

The pace of life is slow but the biodiversity of the region is rich.

Back on the water, the prince was taken by boat into Guanabara Bay and shown the mangroves.

The trees and shrubs which make up the mangroves are a protected area of natural beauty that has been replanted following deforestation.

Their benefits are vast, from storing carbon to acting as buffer zones in stormy weather.

But they need conserving.

Prince William was part of that conservation work planting saplings in the bay to ensure the survival of the mangroves.

"I hope they grow well, " Prince William said. "Next time I come all this will all be mangroves."

Prince William planted new trees during a visit to the mangrove area

While on Paqueta, the future king also spoke to local residents, with retired lawyer Glaucia Martinez, 60, saying he asked her about Paqueta.

"I said that it's safe, it's charming, and it's a good place to live," she said, adding that they all "live in peace".

"People here, they are good, good people, you know, honest people," she told the prince, before expressing her love for the Princess of Wales.

"And I said that I love Kate."

Paqueta's mayor Rodrigo Toledo said it was "very important " for the prince to visit because the island is "totally dedicated to environmental protection and we know that Prince William has dedicated his life to this agenda".

The Earthshot Prize Awards Ceremony will be held in Rio's futuristic Museum of Tomorrow. Kylie Minogue and Shawn Mendes will perform at the event on Wednesday evening.

Five projects will each win a million pound prize for their environmental innovations. The shortlist includes the city of Guangzhou in China and its electric public transport network and Lagos Fashion Week in Nigeria, nominated for its work reshaping the fashion industry.

Prince William will be concluding his Brazil visit with his COP30 appearance in Belem, in the Amazon rainforest.

It marks the first time he has travelled internationally for a COP summit, with his father, King Charles III, having previously paved the way for the royals.

The prince accompanied his father to the summit when it was held in Glasgow in 2021, two weeks after the first Earthshot Prize.

The prize annually awards a £1m grant in five different categories for projects that aim to repair the world's climate - and the prince has committed himself to it for 10 years, with Rio marking a halfway point for the venture.

Prince William's visit to Brazil is the most significant royal engagement he will make this year, and is the first official visit since the crisis surrounding his uncle Andrew.

Amazônia bate limite de 1,5ºC acima da temperatura média pela primeira vez

 

Floresta amazônica em chamas em Lábrea (AM) Imagem: Bruno Kelly - 4.set.2024/Reuters



Carlos Madeiro Colunista do UOL

 

 A temperatura da Amazônia brasileira em 2024 ficou 1,5ºC acima da média dos últimos 40 anos. O número é recorde e chega a um limite que nunca deveria ser atingido, segundo o Acordo de Paris. Os dados são da rede MapBiomas, que divulgou hoje uma linha do tempo desde 1985.

No ano passado, a temperatura média na Amazônia brasileira foi de 27,1ºC, a maior já registrada pela rede. A média histórica do bioma entre 1985 e 2024 é de 25,6ºC

A Amazônia também se destaca na análise por estados: o maior aumento de temperatura em 2024 foi registrado em Roraima: 2°C acima da média. Amazonas e Mato Grosso do Sul vêm em seguida, ambos com alta de 1,7ºC.

O recorde, alertam os cientistas, é apenas o primeiro marco de um problema que vem ocorrendo nos últimos anos e que tende a seguir piorando —ao menos em curto prazo. Segundo os dados, a temperatura média da Amazônia vem aumentando 0,29°C por década.

Os dados apontam que, desde 1985, a Amazônia perdeu 52 milhões de hectares (-13%) de área vegetação nativa, o que impulsionou uma alta na temperatura de, em média, 1,2ºC em 40 anos


 

Chuvas diminuem

O desmatamento e o aumento da temperatura estão mudando também o ciclo de precipitações. Em 2024, choveu 20% a menos que a média histórica na Amazônia, um segundo ano seguido de seca

 O bioma, historicamente, é o mais chuvoso do país, com uma média 2.215 mm ao ano. Em 2024, choveu apenas 1.767 mm. A redução, porém, não é homogênea: em algumas regiões a precipitação foi de 1.000 mm a menos.

Anos com mais chuva na Amazônia (1985-2024):

    1989 - 2.455 mm
    1985 - 2.429 mm
    1988 - 2.418 mm
    2000 e 2009 - 2.416 mm

Anos com menos chuva:

    1997 - 1.969
    2015 - 1.940
    1992 - 1.932
    2024 - 1.768
    2023 - 1.751

Com a diminuição das chuvas, aumentou a área queimada na Amazônia, que atingiu 15,6 milhões de hectares no bioma em 2024

 Os anos de 2023 e 2024 tiveram forte influência do fenômeno do El Niño, que favorece a ocorrência de seca e altas temperaturas na Amazônia, diz a pesquisadora Luciana Rizzo, do MapBiomas Atmosfera. "Mas não se trata de um valor isolado de temperatura acima da média. A temperatura está crescendo sistematicamente ao longo dos últimos 40 anos, e a estação seca da Amazônia está ficando mais longa", diz

Grande vazante do rio Negro em São Gabriel da Cachoeira (AM) Imagem: Ray Baniwa/Rede Wayur

" Isso coloca uma forte pressão sobre os ecossistemas. Temperaturas mais altas e eventos extremos de seca ameaçam a resiliência da floresta e seus serviços ecossistêmicos, como a remoção de carbono pela fotossíntese e dos rios voadores que contribuem para as chuvas no centro do país. "
Luciana Rizzo

Outros biomas também aquecem

Entre todos os biomas brasileiros, o Pantanal foi o que registrou em 2024 a maior alta em relação à média: 1,8°C acima.

A situação preocupa porque o bioma é o que mais vem aquecendo ao longo dos últimos 40 anos, com média de 0,47°C a mais por década. O Pampa é o que menos sofre, mas mesmo assim vem tendo altas de 0,14°C por década


 

"Estes aumentos de temperatura têm impactos significativos em todos os biomas brasileiros. A redução de precipitação também tem efeitos importantes, especialmente na Amazônia e no Pantanal", diz Paulo Artaxo, da plataforma MapBiomas Atmosfera

Monday, November 3, 2025

Alaska's permafrost meltdown


 
 

The Arctic has warmed four times faster than anywhere else on the planet, and today’s newsletter takes you to Alaska for a firsthand view. There, researchers are racing to understand what’s happening to permafrost and the 1.4 trillion tons of carbon it stores. Nothing less than the fate of the climate hangs in the balance.

 

Extreme science on top of the world

By Danielle Bochove

On the last day of August, as the High North summer tips to autumn, I found myself balancing on the gunnels of a 10-foot inflatable Achilles raft bouncing across whitecaps scudding the Beaufort Sea. The temperature was barely above freezing, the sun fickle. 

It's a short ride but the only dry way to get me, lacking hip-waders, to a waterlogged patch of tundra beside one of Hilcorp Alaska’s massive oil pads where the team of scientists from Woods Hole, Massachusetts, I’ve embedded with will be gathering data all week. (The boat serves another purpose, which I’ll get to.)

Doing climate research under the shadow of an oil rig is ironic, to say the least, but in this part of the world, there’s no other option. Alaska's Prudhoe Bay oil fields are the largest in North America. Once you travel north to Deadhorse — a "town" that exists solely to serve the vast oil production complex — it’s the end of the road unless you can get permission from one of the oil companies to access the land they lease on the edge of the Arctic Ocean for fossil fuel extraction.

The scientists take a soil sample at the edge of a Beaufort Sea lagoon. Photographer: Nathaniel Wilder

 

The work on this scientific project is multifaceted, but the common denominator is saltwater. As sea levels rise and storms get more violent, the ocean is washing over the tundra with increasing frequency.

The team is studying knock-on effects, including the impact that inundation may be having on permafrost. The frozen layer of mineral soil, rock and undecomposed organic material stretches across millions of acres and contains roughly 1.4 trillion tons of carbon. Understanding how fast it’s thawing is key to gauging how much previously frozen carbon is being released into the atmosphere, and ultimately the state of the global carbon budget.

The days were long — we were up at 6 a.m. and often couldn’t make it back to camp before the kitchen closed — but the scientists stayed deeply focused on their work. In fact, they were so intense I found myself doubting whether any of them would even notice if one of the polar bears in the area wandered by.

I learned about their experiments, but I also learned that scanning the horizon for polar bears 10 hours a day strains the eyes as well as the nerves. I felt better when the project lead, Julia Guimond, told me she has polar bear dreams before every expedition — and worse when the team’s veteran, Jim McClelland, said that’s because two years ago, a polar bear pawed through their equipment while they ran and escaped in the boat. (In addition to transporting reporters, it serves as a bear escape vehicle.) 

Happily, this trip was bear-free.

Julia Guimond pulls a stake from a Beaufort Sea lagoon. Photographer: Nathaniel Wilder

 

Among the many images indelibly etched in my memory is one of Guimond plunging her shoulders beneath the frigid water of No Point Creek, feeling for the underwater equipment she installed back in July. With her orange toque and dripping bare arms, she looked like a character on some yet-to-be-created Alaska reality TV show.

It might not be a bad backup plan. The state of scientific funding in the US is dire right now, with widespread cuts by the Trump administration. The stakes are particularly high for Alina Spera and Liz Elmstrom, the younger postdoctoral researchers on this trip, whose careers depend on landing funding that can act as a launchpad for their own research.

“It’s not the easiest career path,” Elmstrom told me one evening, but there’s no work that makes her happier.

On our last day in the field, it’s not hard to see why. The sun came out, coats came off, and with the bulk of the work done, we paused to marvel at the weather. I took my first five-minute ‘’tundra nap” and we all enjoyed a packed lunch on the beach.

Noticing that his fingers are clean after being caked in grime from gathering core samples, McClelland deadpanned, “I likely ate some 1000-year-old dirt.”

It’s a moment of levity before one last afternoon push. And then it’s time to pack the samples in coolers, load them on trucks and scrub the boat.

The contents of those coolers are now back in Massachusetts, undergoing months of analysis. As more pieces of the permafrost carbon sink puzzle are filled in, the magnitude of the challenge the world faces will become clear. If more of this vast store of carbon starts to leak into the atmosphere, the climate will heat up to still more dangerous levels.

And the permafrost is just one natural carbon sink within the vast carbon budget. Follow our series looking at the entire system in the coming months, starting with this one.

Saturday, November 1, 2025

The Brazilian Amazon will be in the spotlight next week as the first batch of COP30-related events kicks off

 





Belém Builds its Hopes on COP

By Fabiano Maisonnave

Belém, the gateway to the Amazon rainforest, is alive with anticipation. Just days before COP30, the world’s largest climate summit, new venues are opening almost daily, roads are being widened, and parks, cultural centers, restaurants and bars are springing up as construction crews race to prepare the Brazilian city for more than 50,000 visitors expected for the event. Yet, many Belenenses are missing the buzz.


The city of more than 1.3 million inhabitants in the northern state of Pará has been undergoing sweeping changes in recent years, driven by roughly $1 billion in investments to revitalize one of Brazil’s oldest — and poorest — state capitals. But an exodus of residents in search of jobs and a better quality of life has also made it one of the Brazilian cities with the sharpest population declines.

In many ways, Belém tells the story of urban Amazonia, a region rich in resources but short on opportunity. Dependent on mining, agriculture and energy, its economy offers limited formal jobs.

Belém has the highest proportion of slums among Brazil’s capitals. Some of these are stilt houses built over river waters in the city center, which flood from time to time. Others are clusters of wooden homes spread across low-lying outskirts, most without access to the public water network.


 

The choice of Belém for COP30 underscores an effort to spur economic development. Preparations to host a global event have brought the kind of investment the city hasn’t witnessed in years.

“There is a very strong expectation that COP will change our destiny,” says singer Fafá de Belém, one of Brazil’s most iconic artists, about her native city. 

Along with stalls at Ver-o-Peso, the Amazon’s largest open-air market, a growing number of upscale restaurants showcase its distinctive cuisine, a blend of seafood and rainforest flavors such as tacacá, a hot broth that mixes cassava, a shrimp that lives in brackish water, and jambu, an Amazonian plant famous for its numbing and tingling effect inside the mouth.

The Ver-o-Peso market complex in Belém. Photographer: Alessandro Falco/Bloomberg

 

Rhythms born in the region, such as the sensual lambada, have spread across Brazil and the world. The city’s striking architecture is showcased in classical landmarks such as the Theatro da Paz (Peace Theater). Inspired by Milan’s Teatro alla Scala, it embodies the opulence of the era when the Amazon enjoyed a global monopoly on rubber production.

Although much of the rainforest surrounding Belém has vanished, the city still preserves fragments that evoke its former splendor. On nearby Combu Island, visitors can wander through a flooded forest and admire a towering sumaúma tree — known as the “mother of the forest,” — while the Utinga Park offers tranquil trails shaded by tall native trees.

Still, tourism in Belém remains largely underdeveloped. Just over 33,000 foreigners visited Pará state in 2024, compared with more than 1.5 million visitors to Rio de Janeiro state, according to official data. The Brazilian Tourist Board says there are still no studies on the potential impact of COP30 on Belém’s tourism industry.

In early October, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva visited Belém to inaugurate the new projects. “If we improve the quality of life for the people of Belém, it means increasing the chances of attracting more tourists,” he said at the ceremony.

One of most visible changes brought by COP30 works can be seen along Belém’s waterfront, where the revamped Docas — a onetime port district now bustling with shops and restaurants — joins a new linear park built along a canalized river and the Amazônias Museum, whose debut exhibition showcases a sweeping collection of photographs by the late Sebastião Salgado.

Just a few blocks away, however, trash piles up along streets lined with empty, crumbling buildings where homeless people wander.

COP30 will leave a lasting mark on Belém, says the Pará state government, which is leading the city’s infrastructure overhaul. At its center will be Parque da Cidade — the conference’s main venue — which is expected to turn into a public park about the size of Washington’s National Mall once the summit ends.

Amid criticism from residents and local media for failing to complete most of the planned sanitation and macro-drainage works in time for the summit, the state government has pledged $3.6 billion in investments over the coming years to complete Belém’s sewage system by 2033. 

“I’m very worried about the post-COP hangover,” says Fafá de Belém. “The city is under big, structural reforms, and that can’t stop after the event. We have to hold the government accountable, but we also have to learn how to preserve.”

 

The US skips COP

High-level US representatives are staying away from the UN climate negotiations in Brazil, even as President Donald Trump seeks to influence energy policy globally.

The US won’t be sending any senior representatives to the COP30 climate summit, according to a White House official.

Other world leaders — including Chinese President Xi Jinping — are also set to skip summit events beginning next week in Belém, Brazil. Although 143 nations will have delegations at the UN negotiations, just 57 heads of state and government are now slated to attend official summit events, the COP30 presidency said in Brasília on Friday.

But European leaders are likely to show up in force, signaling the region still sees itself as a champion of climate ambition. The EU is set to push for more global efforts to cut emissions and is weighing signing up to global initiatives on carbon markets and sustainable fuels.


 

Thursday, October 23, 2025

Marine heatwave over Pacific Ocean could lead to flooding in north-west. Severe ‘blob’ or marine heatwave can lead to increased inundation and wintery weather in eastern North America

People gather along the rocky bluffs of La Jolla's Windansea Beach in San Diego, California. Photograph: Kevin Carter/Getty Images

 by  

A marine heatwave known as a blob was especially severe this year in the north-western and central Pacific Ocean, which could lead in the coming months to increased flooding in the US Pacific north-west and especially wintery weather in eastern North America, according to climate scientists.

The temperature in August in the northern Pacific was 2.5C above preindustrial levels, according to Berkeley Earth, a non-profit that studies global warming.

That spike can lead to more thunder storms and affect marine species, according to Zeke Hausfather, a research scientist with Berkeley Earth.

“I kind of wonder, is this going to be a permanent feature?” said Nick Bond, a climatologist with the state of Washington and the University of Washington, who coined the term “blob” for the phenomenon.

 

Bond added: “A storm can come along and cool off the ocean some. You might have a sunny summer and it will warm up a little bit more than usual, so there are those kinds of fluctuations. But boy, what is out there in the central north Pacific? That is not going away anytime soon.”

Bond said he started calling such a heatwave a blob because “they are not static. They are kind of amorphous. They move around and evolve with time as the weather changes.”

Over the past decade, such heatwaves have become more severe and frequent.

“It has become appreciated that there can be these events that happen in the ocean that are significant, especially from an ecosystem point of view but also from a weather point of view,” Bond said. “It’s important to monitor them and to hopefully forecast them more effectively and just be aware that the climate is changing.”

From 2014 to 2016, there was a blob along the US west coast in which ocean temperatures were up to 3C above normal, according to the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration.

 

“There were a lot of harmful algal blooms along the US west coast of unprecedented scope and intensity, and those shut down commercial shellfish fisheries,” Bond said.

Higher oceanic temperatures can force marine species to migrate or lead to their death, said Hausfather.

“The impacts on various marine species, on phytoplankton, which drive a lot of the food web, are quite important,” said Hausfather.

Some news organizations recently reported that the blob could cause Chicago to have the “coldest, snowiest” winter in years.

While Bond said the blob could play a role in the weather so far inland, it would probably only be a “secondary player”.

“If the air coming in off the ocean here in western Washington state is warmer than normal, then we will have less snow, all other things being equal. That effect doesn’t extend that far inland,” Bond said. “For it to impact snowfall in Chicago, it has to be causing a disruption in the weather patterns … It doesn’t mean that it has no influence whatsoever, but there are other factors that are going to be more important to how snowy it is in the midwestern US.”

Scientists also do not yet have enough data to state with confidence what impact such blobs will have and the impact can be confounded by developments such as a disruption in the polar vortex, Bond said.

In short, Bond said: “We are limited by just how many blobs we have had.”

 

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Mosquitoes found in Iceland for first time as climate crisis warms country. Three specimens discovered in what was previously one of the few places in the world without the insects

 

A Culiseta annulata mosquito, which is the type found in Kiðafell, Kjós. Photograph: Alamy

 by 

Environment reporter
 



 

Mosquitoes have been found in Iceland for the first time as global heating makes the country more hospitable for insects.

The country was until this month one of the few places in the world that did not have a mosquito population. The other is Antarctica.

Scientists have predicted for some time that mosquitoes could establish themselves in Iceland as there are plentiful breeding habitats such as marshes and ponds. Many species will be unable to survive the harsh climate, however.

But Iceland is warming, at four times the rate of the rest of the northern hemisphere. Glaciers have been collapsing and fish from warmer, southern climes such as mackerel have been found in the country’s waters.

As the planet warms, more species of mosquito have been found across the globe. In the UK, eggs of the Egyptian mosquito (Aedes aegypti) were found this year, and the Asian tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus) has been discovered in Kent. These are invasive species that can spread tropical diseases such as dengue, chikungunya and Zika virus.

Iceland is warming at four times the rate of the rest of the northern hemisphere. Photograph: Jon Arnold Images Ltd/Alamy

Matthías Alfreðsson, an entomologist at the Natural Science Institute of Iceland, confirmed the findings there. He identified the insects himself after they were sent to him by a citizen scientist.

He said: “Three specimens of Culiseta annulata were found in Kiðafell, Kjós, two females and one male. They were all collected from wine ropes during wine roping aimed at attracting moths.”

The species is cold-resistant and can survive Icelandic conditions by sheltering through winter in basements and barns.

 

Björn Hjaltason found the mosquitoes and posted about it on the Facebook group Insects in Iceland. “At dusk on October 16, I caught sight of a strange fly on a red wine ribbon,” Björn said, referring to the trap he uses to attract insects. “I immediately suspected what was going on and quickly collected the fly. It was a female.”

He caught two more and sent them to the science institute where they were identified.


 

 

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