While 2020 will go down in the history books as the year that the COVID-19 pandemic rocked the planet, it was also a dire year for weather events that impacted regions all over the world.
Many of these unprecedented weather events have been directly linked to climate change, highlighting the urgent need to reduce our carbon emissions and move towards renewable energy sources.
Unprecedented events
Some of the most significant weather events that occurred include:
The ‘Godzilla’ dust storm
An unprecedented dust storm from the Sahara Desert in Africa blanketed Puerto Rico and other Caribbean nations, extending as far as the United States. It was so epic in nature that it was dubbed Godzilla. Its cause has been linked to Arctic warming and declining sea ice.
The winter heatwave in Norway
The Scandinavian nation is better known for frost, snow and ice in January than the warm, clear conditions it was met with in 2020. Norway recorded its warmest January day in history with the mercury reaching 19°C – more than 25°C higher than the average for that time of year.
Heatwave in Antarctica
While the Arctic Circle was experiencing record heat, so too were the southern polar caps in the Antarctic, which reached a temperature of more than 20°C for the first time in history. This led to widespread melting of glaciers.
The Australian bushfires
Climate change opponents point to the fact that Australia is known for its bushfires, with the Black Friday bushfires in 1939 and Ash Wednesday bushfires in 1983 etched in our history books. But nothing compared to the apocalyptic scenes that Australia saw in 2020, which were fuelled by heatwaves.
Wildfires around the world
Fires raged through the Arctic itself, with Siberia in Russia the worst region impacted. Over 20.9 million hectares of land was ravaged as record temperatures hit the Arctic Circle, including 38°C in the town of Verkhoyansk.
Then it was the United States’ turn with the west coast experiencing a record wave, which ignited the worst wildfire season seen in 70 years. That stretched into South America, and by August the Amazon was ablaze. The 2019 fires in the Amazon attracted national attention, but 2020 was largely overlooked for the crisis in California, even though there were 66 per cent more fires in the Amazon last year.
Super Typhoon Goni
The residents of Bato on Catanduanes Island in the Philippines could only brace themselves as the strongest ever tropical cyclone made landfall on November 1. The region was ravaged with consistent winds of 225kmph which killed 31 people, left hundreds of thousands of people without homes and causing over $1 billion in damage.
Hottest recorded temperature on Earth
Death Valley in the northern Mojave Desert of California is one of the hottest places on the planet. It held the previous record for the hottest recorded temperature of 129.2 degrees Fahrenheit, which was achieved in 2013. This record was broken in 2020, when Death Valley’s mercury soared to 129.9 degrees Fahrenheit (54.4°C).
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