Dramatic video shows bushfire overtake firefighters 00:52 Source: CNN
As we move into the new year, it's easy to see that things changed for a lot of people in 2020.
Alongside a deadly pandemic, 2020 also delivered reminders of the severity of the climate crisis facing the world -- droughts, floods, heatwaves, wildfires and hurricanes continued to disrupt life for communities across the globe, in addition to and in spite of the challenges brought by Covid-19.
Images of some of these climate events -- visually stunning and sobering in equal measure -- have been captured by NASA's fleet of Earth-observing satellites and instruments found on the International Space Station.
Unprecedented wildfires
On this day last year, NASA's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer captured images of thick, tan-colored smoke drifting across Southeastern Australia, taken as the country was ravaged by one of its worst wildfire seasons on record.
Fire season in Australia is always dangerous -- but conditions were unusually severe in 2020, fanning the flames and making firefighting conditions particularly difficult.
Experts say climate change has worsened the scope and impact of natural disasters like fires and floods -- weather conditions are growing more extreme, and, for years, and fires have been starting earlier in the season and spreading with greater intensity.
This natural-color image of Southeastern Australia was acquired on
January 4, 2020 by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer
on NASA's Aqua satellite.
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In the image below, captured on September 9, a thick blanket of smoke can be seen along the West Coast.
"Climate and fire scientists have long anticipated that fires in the U.S. West would grow larger, more intense, and more dangerous. But even the most experienced among them have been at a loss for words in describing the scope and intensity of the fires burning in West Coast states during September 2020," NASA said.
This image shows North America on September 9, 2020, as a thick
blanket of smoke covered the West Coast.
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The Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) and the Ozone Mapping and Profiler Suite (OMPS) sensors, found on the NOAA-NASA Suomi NPP satellite, collected daily images of thick plumes of aerosol particles blowing throughout the US West, which, according to NASA, was on a scale that satellites and scientists rarely see.
Drought
On July 3, 2020, the Operational Land Imager on Landsat 8 captured
this false-color image of the river near Rosario, a key port city in
Argentina. |
2020 was meant to be the year of climate action. Instead, it
crowned a wasted decade
|
An extended period of unusually warm weather and drought in southern Brazil, Paraguay and Northern Argentina caused the river to drop to its lowest levels in decades.
Not only has the drought contributed to an increase in fire activity in the surrounding delta and floodplain areas, but it has also affected local businesses and residents, with ships grounded and low water levels costing millions of dollars in the grain industry.
Human activity has been linked to the world's risk of drought since the start of the 20th century: Greenhouse gases generated by power plants, farming, cars, trains and human activities in general have influenced the risk of droughts, and experts predict that drought linked to climate change will worsen.
Hurricanes
Hurricane Laura, one of the 10 strongest hurricanes to make landfall in the US, swept through southwestern Louisiana in August, killing at least six and leaving a wide path of destruction it its wake.
The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season was the most active on record, and many of the storms that slammed into the Gulf Coast, Central America and the Caribbean last year showed signs that they were supercharged by global warming.
The Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on NOAA-20
acquired this image of Hurricane Laura at 2:20 a.m. Central Daylight
Time on August 26, 2020. |
Links
- (AU) Australia Records Fourth-Warmest Year In 2020, Despite La Niña
- Floods, Storms And Searing Heat: 2020 In Extreme Weather
- This Year (2020) Was A Disaster For The Planet
- The World’s 10 Most Destructive Climate Disasters Of 2020
- From Hopeful To Horrific, Here Are The 10 Most Important Climate Stories Of 2020
- 2020 Review: Earth Looked Like Hell From Space This Year
- (AU) 2020 Climate Year in Review: Legal Insights
- A Year (Like No Other) In Review: A Snapshot Of The World Bank Group’s Climate Work In 2020
- 2020 In Climate Change
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