The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: What to Watch for From Dubai
Dear Diary. The world is watching to see if anything substantial will come from COP28, which started today in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. This crucial climate meeting already has a cloud hanging over it:
Cop28 @COP28_UAE president denies on eve of summit he abused his position to sign oil deals via @fionaharvey @guardian https://t.co/0QmHBPF1up@AndersWijkman @ICLEI_advocacy @Sdg13Un @GNewshub @GeraldKutney @climateguyw @thomaspower @gbibuildingco @CDP @MarkWatts_…
— Kaj Embren (@KajEmbren) November 29, 2023
Either Sultan Al Jaber steps down IMMEDIATELY as #COP28 president, or a boycott of #COP28 is in order: https://t.co/vAeKC3AQFX
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) November 28, 2023
We will see how much the tentacles of Middle East oil and oil in general are affecting the conference. With summaries linked in each Diary post in the next few days.
If you are very much interested in climate, here is a nice booklist:
Reports to read ahead of COP28:
— Climate Connections (@CC_Yale) November 30, 2023
🗞️ 12 recently released reports that track the world’s progress on climatehttps://t.co/LSRMBO95RT
Bob Henson has written a great post about what to expect from COP28 and how it might affect levels of carbon pollution from here on out. Here is his Yale Climate Communication post:
What to watch for at the COP28 U.N. climate meeting in Dubai » Yale Climate Connections
What to watch for at the COP28 U.N. climate meeting in Dubai
The meeting is a key step in bolstering national pledges to cut heat-trapping pollution.
by BOB HENSON NOVEMBER 28, 2023
Despite its desert locale, Dubai can be enshrouded by heavy fog as moisture moves onshore from the Persian Gulf. (Photo: Tom Dulat)
Between a record-smashing year of global heat and extremes, a surge in green energy, and the relentless juggernaut of fossil fuel production, there’s a lot for attendees to consider as they head to Dubai, United Arab Emirates, for the 28th annual Conference of Parties (COP28) of the UN’s Framework Convention on Climate Change.
These massive COP meetings have taken place every year but one since 1995. Each COP now draws tens of thousands of diplomats, scientists, activists, and journalists. During the two weeks of each conference, the signatories to the 1992 framework convention — including every member state of the United Nations, plus the Cook Islands, Niue, and Palestine — review and refine their plans for cutting heat-trapping pollution and adapting to the climate change already underway.
The 2023 COP takes place from November 30 to December 12 in Dubai. This will be only the second time that a COP has been held in a major oil-producing Middle Eastern country, and the hosts are working hard to recast the fossil fuel industry as a major force in emissions reduction. Whether the outcomes from Dubai can live up to that seemingly paradoxical goal remains to be seen.
What’s special about this year’s COP in Dubai?
Among other things, this year is the first “stocktake” COP. The Paris agreement — so named because it took shape in that city during COP21 in 2015 — hinges on an entirely voluntary system of nation-by-nation emission goals, buttressed by international peer pressure. The system includes a reset process that’s meant to help ratchet up the world’s emission-cutting ambition every five years. This includes a formal stocktake, which examines national and global progress against the pledges submitted five years earlier — in this case, 2018. Over the following two years (in this case, by 2025), each country then updates its pledge, or “nationally determined contribution.”
This year’s stocktake report, released in September ahead of the Dubai meeting, sounded distinct notes of alarm. One of the main conclusions — more of a reminder than a surprise — was that the collective national pledges, even if all are met, aren’t anywhere near enough to limit global warming to 1.5°C above preindustrial levels, the goal enshrined in the Paris agreement and reinforced in subsequent years as a global target. What’s more, many countries with ambitions to reduce their carbon pollution to net zero by midcentury have emission-reduction goals that are still too lukewarm for that feat.
Read: Can we still avoid 1.5 degrees C of global warming?
Although the next national pledges won’t be submitted until COP30, in 2025, Dubai will still be an important launchpad for the effort to bulk up those pledges over the next two years.
“Ultimately, the success of the first Global Stocktake hinges on whether governments adequately respond to its findings by the conclusion of COP28 — not with vague platitudes but with commitments to real action,” wrote Jamal Srouji and Deirdre Cogan of the World Resources Institute.
Preliminary day-by-day focal points for COP28. (Image credit: UNFCCC)
How many people are expected at COP28 in Dubai?
Organizers have been projecting more than 70,000 attendees at COPY28. That would smash the record of around 40,000 registered participants from last year’s COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. Many world leaders, including presidents and prime ministers, typically attend the meetings. U.S. President Joe Biden was at COP26 and COP27, but he is not expected to be in Dubai.
Pope Francis, who’s long been a vocal proponent of addressing climate change, plans to be on hand, which would mark the first time any pope has attended a COP meeting. In October 2023, Francis released “Laudate Deum,” an exhortation on the climate crisis. It included a section focused on the Dubai meeting:
“If we are confident in the capacity of human beings to transcend their petty interests and to think in bigger terms, we can keep hoping that COP28 will allow for a decisive acceleration of energy transition, with effective commitments subject to ongoing monitoring. This Conference can represent a change of direction, showing that everything done since 1992 was in fact serious and worth the effort, or else it will be a great disappointment and jeopardize whatever good has been achieved thus far,” the Pope wrote.
How might the presence of a fossil fuel magnate as COP leader affect the proceedings?
As agreed to by the Asia-Pacific countries in their role as host region for this year’s conference, the COP28 president is Sultan Al Jaber, a chemical engineer and business leader who also happens to be head of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company. It’s the first time any COP meeting has been helmed by a CEO, much less one from the fossil fuel industry. The appointment has held firm despite protests from many climate activists as well as more than 130 U.S. and European lawmakers.
Read: Checklist: How to take advantage of brand-new clean energy tax credits
“It is obvious … that his dual role is a glaring conflict of interest,” said Marta Schaaf, Amnesty International’s program director for climate, economic and social justice, and corporate accountability.
As summarized by climate journalist Bob Berwyn at Inside Climate News: “It’s going to be hard for some countries to trust and believe anything regarding a commitment to reduce fossil fuel use from a company in a country that depends on that fossil fuel production for its economy.”
Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, then the President-Designate of the UNFCCC COP28 climate conference and CEO of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, speaks at a side event at the UNFCCC SB58 Bonn Climate Change Conference on June 8, 2023, in Bonn, Germany. (Photo: Sascha Schuermann/Getty Images)
Against the undertow of opposition, a major public relations push has attempted to burnish Al Jaber’s credentials, stressing that he served for three years as the UAE’s special envoy for climate change. When he addressed a pre-COP meeting on October 30, Al Jaber sounded much like a traditional COP president, proclaiming, “We are heading in the right direction, but nowhere near fast enough,” and “We must end deforestation and preserve natural carbon sinks.”
The COP28 planned by Al Jaber and colleagues will stress the role of the private sector in climate action. For example, companies that sign on to an agreement called the “Net-Zero Transition Charter,” which launched Nov. 1, will be expected to produce a net-zero transition plan and transparent emission-reduction targets aligned with the 1.5°C goal.
Fossil fuel companies leery of a future without oil, gas, and coal are increasingly operating on parallel tracks, supporting renewable energy while maintaining or even boosting their supply lines of fossil fuel.
This more-of-everything approach can be seen on the national level as well.
Consider the two biggest emitters of recent decades. China is running far ahead of its ambitious 10-year goals for clean energy even as it leads the world in the development of coal-driven power plants. And the U.S., now the world’s largest oil producer by far — as well as the world’s largest exporter of liquefied natural gas — churned out more than twice as much oil in 2022 as in 2011, even as U.S. wind and solar energy more than quadrupled during that period.
Such crosscurrents may rise to the surface in Dubai in something as simple as wording choices. The COP26 meeting in 2021 ended with a call to “phase down” coal-fired power, a last-minute switch from “phase out.” That wording was reiterated at COP27, despite calls from the European Union and India to recommend a phasedown of all fossil fuels.
At a June climate meeting, Al Jabar said that “the phase down of fossil fuels is inevitable.”
What is the proposed loss-and-damage fund, and will it make headway in Dubai?
One of the biggest outcomes of last year’s COP27 meeting was the creation of a Loss and Damage Fund to compensate those nations most affected by climate change. A transitional committee has scrambled in recent months to hammer out the fund’s operational guidelines, which are to be approved in Dubai.
One huge challenge is determining exactly how much would be owed to which nations for recent events, much less future ones. A 2023 report from the World Meteorological Organization found that weather, climate, and water extremes caused more than 2 million deaths and $4.3 trillion USD in losses from 1970 to 2021. However, the report didn’t break out what fraction may have arisen from human-caused climate change. Attribution of specific events to climate change, as carried out by individual research teams as well as groups like World Weather Attribution, is a growing but still-piecemeal endeavor.
Another question has been whether the Loss and Damage Fund should be placed within the World Bank to take advantage of its existing structure and processes, as the United States and several other rich nations have insisted, or whether it should operate as an independent body within the COP framework, as argued by many countries and activists who see the World Bank as a problematic, high-overhead force in developing nations.
At a meeting on November 4, 2023, the transitional committee voted to recommend — pending COP28 approval — that the World Bank serve for the next four years as the fund’s interim trustee and host. After the committee meeting, Harjeet Singh, head of global political strategy at the nonprofit Climate Action Network International, told Reuters that it was “a somber day for climate justice, as rich countries turn their backs on vulnerable communities.”
The committee punted on the question of whether developed nations should be required to contribute to the fund — though they also rejected a U.S.-submitted footnote specifying that any such contributions would be voluntary. This and other aspects of the Loss and Damage Fund could end up among the hottest topics under discussion in Dubai.
The Loss and Damage Fund comes on the heels of an Adaptation Fund agreed to at COP 15 (Copenhagen, 2009) and established in 2010. Participants agreed in Copenhagen that developing countries would commit $100 billion USD per year by 2020 to help less prosperous economies deal with the evolving consequences of climate change, which are driven largely by emissions already put out mostly by rich nations. As of late 2020, a paltry $1 billion had been raised toward the Adaptation Fund, including nothing from the United States. The original goal expires in 2025, so a process is now underway to set a “new collective quantified goal” — at least $100 billion a year — toward what’s now being characterized more broadly as climate finance, still centered around developing nations.
Is the world making progress on deforestation?
At the COP26 meeting, held in Glasgow in 2021, participants set an ambitious goal to eliminate human-caused deforestation by 2030. There’s been only one annual data point since then, and it wasn’t encouraging. According to the latest Global Forest Review from the World Resources Institute, tropical forest loss unrelated to fires grew by 13% from 2021 to 2022, the largest such increase in six years.
Tropical primary forest loss per year, 2002-2022. Non-fire-related loss can occur from mechanical clearing for agriculture and logging, as well as natural causes such as wind damage and river meandering. The three-year moving average (gray line) may represent a more accurate picture of the data trends due to uncertainty in year-to-year comparisons. All areas required an original tree cover canopy density of at least 30% to be classified as deforested. (Image credit: World Resources Institute)
Progress in some nations does give reason for hope. Malaysia and Indonesia, two of the 10 nations with the greatest loss of tropical primary forest in 2022, have both seen marked improvement since the mid-2010s, in part due to restrictions on massive palm oil plantations.
Trending the other way are several African nations, particularly the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where deforestation has risen since the mid-2010s amid growing populations and resultant pressure to carve out farmland and ranchland. Deforestation is also expanding in Bolivia, where primary forest loss hit a record high in 2022.
The pendulum may be swinging back toward forest protection in Brazil, which is the world’s single leading tropical deforester — responsible for more than 40% of 2022’s global primary forest loss. Deforestation unrelated to fire (which is typically clear-cutting) rose in Brazil by more than 50% during the 2010s. However, Brazil’s new president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, was also president during the 2000s when deforestation dropped by roughly half, and he supports the COP goal of ending deforestation by 2030. Brazilian satellite data for the first half of 2023 showed that deforestation dropped by 34% as compared to the first half of 2022 when climate-change-dismissive Jair Bolsonaro was still in power.
One complication over the next few months is the potent El Niño event now underway. Drought across the tropics is typically most intense and extensive during El Niño, including the Amazon as well as parts of Southeast Asia. Intense drought in northern Brazil has already pulled the Amazon’s second-largest tributary, the Negro River, to its lowest level in 121 years of data.
The last strong El Niño event, which peaked in 2015-16, led in 2016 to what was by far the biggest yearly deforestation on record (see figure above). This was largely due to a spike in drought-fueled fires. Human-caused warming tends to intensify the effects of periodic drought, as higher temperatures further parch the landscape and stress ecosystems.
Activists from Ocean Rebellion dressed as Boris Johnson and an Oilhead set light to the sail of a small boat as they protest next to the River Clyde in Glasgow, Scotland, on October 27, 2021, about a month before the COP26 meeting. The conference took place at several sites in Glasgow, Scotland, including the OVO Hydro arena seen in the background of this photo. (Photo: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
Are protests expected at the COP28 meeting in Dubai?
As in past COPs, a section of Expo City Dubai called the Green Zone will be a dedicated space for activists and nongovernmental organizations to hold forth and engage with journalists, delegates, and the general public.
In a joint statement with the United Nations in August, the United Arab Emirates proclaimed that “in line with UNFCCC guidelines and adherence to international human rights norms and principles, there will be space available for climate activists to assemble peacefully and make their voices heard.”
Any direct action outside the expo hall is likely to be muted by both legal and cultural constraints on public protest within Dubai and the emirates. Authorities can effectively quash any protests they consider disruptive. Human Rights Watch noted that speakers at a climate and health summit last March in Abu Dhabi were reportedly advised not to criticize “Islam, the government, corporations or individuals.”
At last year’s COP27 in Sharm el-Sheik, Egypt, all demonstrations outside the Green Zone were limited to approved events with heavy security in a predesignated area.
Protesters at the COP27 climate conference in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt — including Sanaa Seif (center), sister of dissident Alaa Abdel-Fattah, who was imprisoned in Egypt and on a hunger strike — demonstrate over climate justice, loss and damage, fossil fuels, human rights, exploitation by rich countries of poor countries, and other climate-related issues on November 12, 2022. (Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
Where will COP29 take place?
That’s still an open question, one that participants aim to resolve in Dubai. The COP meetings rotate through the UN’s five regions, and the 2024 meeting is designated for Eastern Europe. That region’s 27 member countries must unanimously agree on the venue, and Bulgaria has offered to host.
However, in the wake of the Ukraine conflict, Russia has flatly rejected any location in the European Union. The non-EU countries Armenia and Azerbaijan have also expressed interest in hosting, but given those two nations’ recent history of conflict, it’s unlikely that either one could get the unanimous vote needed.
“There is no solution at the moment,” Bulgaria’s Environment minister, Julian Popov, told Reuters in mid-October. If no consensus can be attained on an Eastern European host country, the standard default option specified under COP rules would be Bonn, Germany, where the United Nations’ climate-related activities are based.
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BOB HENSON
Bob Henson is a meteorologist and journalist based in Boulder, Colorado. He has written on weather and climate for the National Center for Atmospheric Research, Weather Underground, and many freelance… More by Bob Henson
Bob Henson’s What to watch for at the COP28 U.N. climate meeting in Dubai was first published on Yale Climate Connections, a program of the Yale School of the Environment, available at: http://yaleclimateconnections.org. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 license (CC BY-NC-ND 2.5).
More news and notes from COP28:
What would make #COP28 a success? If the world–or honestly, even a few of the biggest, richest emitters–agreed to phase out fossil fuels and invest in equitable solutions and building resilient nations, economies & communities. My thoughts w @vausecnn: https://t.co/XTlcYO3mgE pic.twitter.com/QGfLmqX70F
— The Real Prof. Katharine Hayhoe (@KHayhoe) November 30, 2023
I discussed where we stand in the climate battle going into the #COP28 climate summit with @BenSTracy on @CBSMornings: https://t.co/AKkj7dmSNF
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) November 30, 2023
#COP28 starts today. Findings from the #IPCC 2023 Synthesis Report are clear.#Climatechange is a threat to human well-being & planetary health.
— IPCC (@IPCC_CH) November 30, 2023
There is a rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a liveable & sustainable future for all.
🔗 https://t.co/zAMzd12TGF pic.twitter.com/iHHp56mmJE
The difference between 1.5°C, 2°C or 3°C average global warming can sound marginal. But these temperature rises represent vastly different future scenarios.
— UN Environment Programme (@UNEP) November 30, 2023
At #COP28, starting today, countries must deliver on their #ClimateAction promises. via @UNFCCChttps://t.co/w0DkrGqIyZ pic.twitter.com/TYQLYbMHAA
Big Meat’s aggressive campaign at #COP28 a strategic push to influence #climate policy https://t.co/mDe03pU7Ef via @NationofChange #food pic.twitter.com/ARjeq23Opj
— Earth Accounting (@EarthAccounting) November 30, 2023
CLIMATE WARS – The Battle for COP28. This Star Wars fan film uses practical models & stop motion like the original trilogy. FULL FILM is here: https://t.co/LiWsI7faEw (Let me know if you like the full film on YouTube) #ClimateWars Best with volume at 50%, it can be loud! pic.twitter.com/aXwHGVBwAA
— BONUS (@TheDisproof) November 30, 2023
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
Another brutally hot day in SOUTH AFRICA with
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 30, 2023
46.2 Vioolsdrif
44.6 Vredendal
Monthly Records fell on or close to the coast with hot berg winds:
42.1 Lamberts Bay
41.8 Tigerhoek pic.twitter.com/vI6yFqkUQN
Big contrasts of air masses in EUROPE
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 30, 2023
GERMANY beat few monthly records of lowest Tmin
-12.4C Wittenborn
and lowest Tmax:
-5.4C Sankt Peter-Ording
-3.4C Hohwach
A warm spell wit sirocco winds might threaten December records in Central/East Mediterranean and Balkans from tomorrow https://t.co/AkRmEq7s7G
After suffering a hacker attack PARAGUAY 🇵🇾managed to fully recover all data of its stations,thanks to the dataloggers.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 30, 2023
On 12 November 45.9C Filadelfia National record heat for November
On 8 November all time highs:
45.4 Prats Gill
44.9 Nueva Asuncion
44.0 Vallemi (Concepcion) pic.twitter.com/VIlifMcHjO
INDONESIA also has been with months of relentless record heat and like most of the tropical islands,had extremely warm nights.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 30, 2023
The MINIMUM temperatures of 29.6C at Sangkapura and 29.2C at Kalianget this month are the highest ever recorded in Indonesia (first time >29C). pic.twitter.com/lHmyoDvZ08
Records are falling allover the world:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 30, 2023
Now it's MALDIVES
33.6C today at Hanimadhoo, it's the highest temperature ever recorded in November in the Maldives.
The same temperature tomorrow would beat the national record of December too.
Stay tuned here if you want to find out…. pic.twitter.com/E1dNyLDTdS
Records are falling allover the world:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 30, 2023
Now it's MALDIVES
33.6C today at Hanimadhoo, it's the highest temperature ever recorded in November in the Maldives.
The same temperature tomorrow would beat the national record of December too.
Stay tuned here if you want to find out…. pic.twitter.com/E1dNyLDTdS
Extremely high temperatures this month also in the Southern parts of VIETNAM
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 29, 2023
The islands,including the disputed Spratly Islands,have recorded MINIMUM TEMPS. between 26C and 29C every night including a Tmin of 29.4C at Huyen Tran the highest ever recorded in Vietnam in November. pic.twitter.com/mVZRmx7auz
Still very mild temperatures in GREENLAND, with 11 stations above +5C today.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) November 30, 2023
If this mildness lasts 24 more hours,tomorrow some December records will fall. pic.twitter.com/j2HV2aFmO4
2023 is set to be the hottest year ever recorded on Earth, and it is also the year when the U.S. broke records in oil and gas production – due in part to Biden administration policies. https://t.co/77ylenH2J1 pic.twitter.com/slyPqX4WFA
— CBS Mornings (@CBSMornings) November 30, 2023
Here is More Climate and Weather News from Thursday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
And here is my climate visualization contribution to #COP28
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) November 30, 2023
The graph is updated through October 2023. See more at https://t.co/53ZaRhYYry pic.twitter.com/PiBANtwfUn
So 400 million has been pledged for this new climate fund. It’s going to take a bit more than that considering a billion dollar disaster is happening every 18 days around the world currently. https://t.co/ixrFSjUJ6V
— Peter Dynes (@PGDynes) November 30, 2023
Regenerative agriculture is great, and has many benefits.
— Dr. Jonathan Foley (@GlobalEcoGuy) November 29, 2023
But the idea that soil carbon sequestration can completely offset the emissions of cattle or daily cows is simply not backed by the science. And here's yet another example.https://t.co/FNnOR01tDF
Biden touts boom in #cleanenergy jobs and manufacturing in Boebert's district
— Green News Report (@GreenNewsReport) November 30, 2023
'Unprecedented' heat sets new nat'l records in Brazil, South Africa
First big jet crosses the Atlantic powered by waste fat, not fossil fuels
In today's @GreenNewsReport
LISTEN: https://t.co/Ux47SjOalZ pic.twitter.com/adA2p2ybzY
As the planet warms, dengue fever is spreading to new regions, including Afghanistan, Southern Europe, and Chad.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) November 30, 2023
A @WHO official said recent outbreaks are a “canary in the coal mine of the climate crisis.”https://t.co/0EUy5z3PnR
The #Miami area just set a record-high tide for the *5th* consecutive day on Thursday! Today's also the 47th day with a record-high tide so far this year (14% of days). In addition, November will set a new monthly record high, making it the *4th* month so far this year to do so. pic.twitter.com/kgxVTV9hha
— Brian McNoldy (@BMcNoldy) November 30, 2023
CA has warmed ~4F, most of which has occurred since 1980 https://t.co/7e5Jnjt0Yo
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) December 1, 2023
WATCH: Greenpeace activists are blocking @Shell's port in Batangas, Philippines to stand in solidarity with climate-impacted communities. On the eve of #COP28 they're calling on the Philippine's and world governments to hold fossil fuel companies to account (1/2) pic.twitter.com/UeRSv6cwWq
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) November 30, 2023
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
Rich nations are touting progress on climate change while ramping up oil and gas drilling.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) November 30, 2023
These countries can truthfully claim to be cutting emissions, even as they export fossil fuels — and the pollution they produce — overseas, writes @BillMcKibben.https://t.co/OkmV8Ch5UB
Iceland is using geothermal energy to help farmers, above the arctic cycle, grow food all year round.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) November 30, 2023
We have the solutions. Implement them. #ActOnClimate #climate #energy #renewables #climatesolutions #EndFossilFuels pic.twitter.com/TrONruzGeT
More from the Weather Department:
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) November 30, 2023
Storm Prediction Outlooks for the next few days. Gulf juice brews bringing up storm chances across the region. Todays chances pretty strong then watching tomorrow into overnight into Saturday. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/u4C1GWSRt6
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) November 30, 2023
Multiple storms will move into the Pacific Northwest through next week, bringing potential hazards of power outages, flooding, landslides, and significant snow in the Intermountain West. pic.twitter.com/9ZcK7LvSzN
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) November 30, 2023
The Pacific Northwest is set to be hit by multiple significant atmospheric rivers over the next week, bringing widespread heavy rain and mountain snow.
— Colin McCarthy (@US_Stormwatch) November 30, 2023
Seattle and Portland are projected to receive 3-6" of rain through early next week, with isolated amounts approaching 20" in… pic.twitter.com/BScgflP7hC
According to satellite data collected yesterday, approximately 60% of continental Europe is currently covered in snow.
— Nahel Belgherze (@WxNB_) November 30, 2023
Meteorological winter begins tomorrow. pic.twitter.com/X7WvFQZCxH
Hurricane season ends today, and the Atlantic season was a relatively merciful one. Activity was above average, but a lack of landfalls by hurricanes in populated areas led to only 12 deaths and damages less than $4 billion, the lowest tally since 2015: https://t.co/UhrEuP0GLO
— Jeff Masters (@DrJeffMasters) November 30, 2023
The 2023 Hurricane Season ends today. Hurricane Idalia was the only U.S. landfalling hurricane in 2023. It made landfall as a category 3 hurricane on Aug. 30 near Keaton Beach, Florida. pic.twitter.com/lqXPcZehY7
— NHC_TAFB (@NHC_TAFB) November 30, 2023
Hurricane season ends today, and the Atlantic season was a relatively merciful one. Activity was above average, but a lack of landfalls by hurricanes in populated areas led to only 12 deaths and damages less than $4 billion, the lowest tally since 2015: https://t.co/UhrEuP0GLO
— Jeff Masters (@DrJeffMasters) November 30, 2023
Today is the last day of Hurricane Season! This year was officially the 4th most active with 20 named storms… the most ever for an El Nino year. https://t.co/Hk3pbO7x8H pic.twitter.com/JZT1LzMi50
— Mike's Weather Page (@tropicalupdate) November 30, 2023
The nature of the 2023 #hurricane season (on the last official day of it) pic.twitter.com/U11GMF4ak9
— Stu Ostro (@StuOstro) November 30, 2023
A Kona Low has been hammering Hawaii over the last 24 hours, dropping enormous amounts of rain and even snow on the high peaks.
— Colin McCarthy (@US_Stormwatch) December 1, 2023
Mauna Kea has seen a half a foot of snow, and nearly 20 inches of rain fell this morning just southeast of Hilo on the Big Island. pic.twitter.com/rgnuw5uJ7U
It's snowing in Hawaii? ☃️🤔 At over 13,000 feet, the peaks of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa do get some snow each winter. Today is one of those days. Only researchers reside there. pic.twitter.com/74iEYWX5ZM
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) November 30, 2023
By late December, convective forcing (🟢) is expected to favor phases 8 and 1 – the Americas and Africa.
— Ben Noll (@BenNollWeather) November 30, 2023
Historically, these phases have been associated with colder than average conditions in the eastern U.S. during December-January 👀 pic.twitter.com/JqyBCiLwIl
More on the Environment and Nature:
“Annually, 9 million lives are lost worldwide due to air, water, and chemical #pollution, outnumbering deaths from war, terrorism, malaria, HIV, tuberculosis, drugs, or alcohol. It's time to break free from fossil fuels and harmful chemicals. #COP28 presents a critical chance to… pic.twitter.com/QbgddKDAa4
— Dr. Mustafa Santiago Ali 🇧🇷 🇪🇹 🇵🇷🇯🇲🤙🏾 (@EJinAction) November 30, 2023
Did you know that without trees we would hardly be able to breathe due to air pollution, traffic exhaust, heat and industrial fumes? Our air would be completely polluted. The forests and trees clean our air and filter out particles that are harmful to us and produce the oxygen.🌳 pic.twitter.com/gk5oio67N8
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) November 30, 2023
Species going extinct 1,000 times faster than nature can make new ones – humans to blame
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) November 30, 2023
Rate could one day increase to 10,000 times
In last 600 years 140 species birds gone extinct -when naturally only 1 species should have gone extinct in that time https://t.co/Q9cIPH7zlo pic.twitter.com/wwDvqQfVp1
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
Residents in Cornwall are waking up to a winter wonderland after parts of the UK saw their coldest November night since 2010. 🌨 pic.twitter.com/6a62uS83To
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) November 30, 2023
Soaring Eagles in the Snow: As good as it gets in Western New York along the Genesee River at Letchworth State Park in Portageville, NY. @andyparkertv @spann @wxbywilliams @CharlesPeekWX @StephanieAbrams @JimCantore @mikebettes @StormHour pic.twitter.com/T0rOaXMLcs
— John Kucko (@john_kucko) November 29, 2023
Night thoughts
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) November 30, 2023
It can also go in the other direction. Respect for this work, it gives courage for further projects of this kind.💚🌱☘️🌿🌲🌳🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/LknhHpUNB1