Sunday, February 8News That Matters

Month: July 2025

Baoding Slammed by Near-Year Rainfall in One Day, Over 19,000 Evacuated Amid Extreme Weather Crisis

Baoding Slammed by Near-Year Rainfall in One Day, Over 19,000 Evacuated Amid Extreme Weather Crisis

Breaking News
Baoding, a major city in northern China’s Hebei province, has been battered by unprecedented rainfall, receiving nearly a full year’s worth of precipitation within just 24 hours. The relentless downpour forced the evacuation of over 19,000 residents and marked one of the most intense storm events the region has ever recorded. According to the China Meteorological Administration (CMA), the western part of Baoding, including Yi County, registered 447.4 mm of rainfall approaching the city’s average annual total of around 500 mm. The storm’s intensity shattered historical records across Hebei and overwhelmed local infrastructure, triggering flash floods and disrupting daily life. The deluge is being viewed as part of a wider pattern of intensifying extreme weather events across East Asia...
Africa Sees Sharp Rise in Climate Lawsuits Amid Worst Climate Disasters

Africa Sees Sharp Rise in Climate Lawsuits Amid Worst Climate Disasters

Breaking News
Africa is witnessing a surge in climate litigation as the continent battles an escalating climate crisis marked by deadly floods, droughts, and heatwaves. A total of 14 out of 23 documented climate-related lawsuits in Africa were filed between 2021 and 2025 its most climate-disaster-prone period so far according to new data compiled by Down To Earth and the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law. During this period alone, over 221 million people were affected by extreme weather events, highlighting the urgency with which communities and civil society are turning to courts to demand accountability and climate justice. Rising Legal Action Amid Worsening Disasters While Africa represents only 0.87% of the over 2,630 climate litigation cases filed globally since 2011, the trend on the cont...
Heatwaves hunger and lost futures: how climate change is stealing children rights in India

Heatwaves hunger and lost futures: how climate change is stealing children rights in India

Breaking News
  As India confronts an escalating climate crisis, it is the nation’s most vulnerable its children who are facing the harshest consequences. In remote villages and crowded urban slums, from Odisha to Assam, the connection between rising temperatures and shrinking meals is growing painfully clear. Climate change, once viewed as an environmental concern, is now deepening child hunger, stunting growth, and disrupting childhoods in silence. Erratic weather patterns scorching heatwaves, flash floods, long droughts are wiping out crops and livelihoods, leaving families without food and children with empty plates. In Balangir, Odisha, a child who once had three meals a day now survives on plain rice and salt. In Assam’s Barpeta district, families displaced by floods struggle for basic ...
Amarnath Lingam Melts Early Again, Experts Sound Climate Alarm

Amarnath Lingam Melts Early Again, Experts Sound Climate Alarm

Breaking News
The sacred Amarnath ice lingam, a natural stalagmite formation venerated by millions of Hindu devotees as a symbol of Lord Shiva, has melted prematurely once again raising urgent questions about the ecological toll of unchecked tourism, road expansion, and climate change in the fragile Himalayas. This year, the lingam had already melted by over 50% before the annual yatra began on July 3, and by mid-July, 95% of over 2.5 lakh pilgrims had to return without a glimpse of the sacred structure. Veteran Kashmir-based journalist Ashraf Wani, who has reported on the yatra for three decades, called the scene at the shrine “the most disheartening in recent memory.” Comparing visuals from 1998 and 2025, Wani said, “What was once a snow-filled spiritual journey is now a dusty, degraded trail ov...
Underground Climate Heroes: Only 9.5% of Fungi Hotspots Protected, Global Study Warns

Underground Climate Heroes: Only 9.5% of Fungi Hotspots Protected, Global Study Warns

Breaking News
A groundbreaking global study has revealed that over 90% of Earth underground fungal biodiversity hotspots are unprotected raising alarms over a hidden ecosystem that vital to combating climate change boosting crop productivity, and maintaining biodiversity. Scientists from the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks (Spun) have unveiled the first high-resolution global maps of mycorrhizal fungi networks living beneath the soil that connect plant roots and regulate ecosystem health. The maps show that only 9.5% of these biodiversity-rich zones fall within legally protected areas, leaving the majority exposed to human threats like deforestation, land degradation, and climate stress. “These fungi are ecosystem engineers,” said Dr Toby Kiers, executive director of Spun. “They...
Advanced Image Scanning Method Reveals Alarming Signs in Earth Climate Subsystems

Advanced Image Scanning Method Reveals Alarming Signs in Earth Climate Subsystems

Breaking News
As Earth continues to heat up, scientists are detecting early warning signs of abrupt and potentially irreversible shifts in key climate systems from the Amazon rainforest to the Arctic Ocean and the Tibetan Plateau. In a groundbreaking study published in AGU Advances, researchers used a computer vision technique originally designed for identifying edges in digital images to scan through more than 150 years of simulated climate data. The technique helped flag when and where rapid climatic shifts could happen in the coming decades. The results are stark: Out of 57 advanced climate models analyzed, 48 showed at least one abrupt transition in a climate subsystem. These shifts could dramatically alter ecosystems, rainfall patterns, and global weather behavior. A New Lens on Climate In...
Africa Tectonic Shift Signals Birth of New Ocean, Say Scientists

Africa Tectonic Shift Signals Birth of New Ocean, Say Scientists

Breaking News
A dramatic geological transformation is quietly unfolding beneath East Africa, where scientists believe the continent is slowly splitting apart potentially giving rise to a brand-new ocean in the distant future. This tectonic activity is centered in the Afar region, where three major plates the Nubian, Somali, and Arabian are pulling away from each other. The movement is occurring along the East African Rift System, a 5,000-kilometre-long fracture zone that stretches from the Red Sea to Mozambique. Experts say this slow rifting could eventually separate eastern Africa from the rest of the continent and allow seawater from the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden to rush in, forming Earth’s next ocean. Recent satellite data and GPS measurements show that the Arabian Plate is moving away from ...
Dharavi Redevelopment Sparks Fears as Residents Face Possible Relocation to Mumbai Toxic Zones

Dharavi Redevelopment Sparks Fears as Residents Face Possible Relocation to Mumbai Toxic Zones

Breaking News
As the Maharashtra government pushes ahead with a massive redevelopment plan for Dharavi, one of Asia’s largest informal settlements, deep concern is growing among thousands of residents who may be forced to leave their homes. While the project promises sleek infrastructure and formal housing, many fear that relocation to some of Mumbai most hazardous areas could spell a public health crisis. The Dharavi Redevelopment Project launched in 2024, aims to transform the 620-acre slum into a modern urban township, spearheaded by a joint venture between the Adani Group and the state’s Slum Rehabilitation Authority. But not everyone in Dharavi will benefit. Up to 100,000 residents without the required documents have been deemed “ineligible” for rehabilitation within Dharavi and face being reloc...
New studies link Arctic warming and ocean heat to rising destructive power of winter storms

New studies link Arctic warming and ocean heat to rising destructive power of winter storms

Breaking News
Recent research reveals that the northeastern United States faces mounting threats from intensifying nor’easters, driven by warming oceans and changes in Arctic climate dynamics. Two new climate studies provide strong evidence that the strongest of these winter storms are becoming more destructive and may increasingly resemble hurricanes in their impact. The studies highlight a 17% rise in the destructive potential of the most powerful nor’easters since 1940. These storms, which typically develop along the U.S. East Coast between North Carolina and Massachusetts, are fed by interactions between cold air from the north and warm, moisture-laden air from the Atlantic’s Gulf Stream. The increase in sea surface temperatures and atmospheric moisture has contributed to more powerful storms, ch...
Plastic-eating fungi offer promising help against ocean pollution, say scientists

Plastic-eating fungi offer promising help against ocean pollution, say scientists

Breaking News
In a significant step toward addressing the global plastic waste crisis, German researchers have discovered freshwater fungi that can feed solely on certain types of synthetic plastic. Found in Lake Stechlin, the fungi are capable of breaking down polyurethane a widely used plastic in construction materials and foams offering a natural, eco-friendly way to tackle plastic pollution. The discovery was made by scientists at the Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries, who studied 18 strains of microfungi living in aquatic habitats. Among them, four strains demonstrated a remarkable ability to thrive without any other carbon source, feeding entirely on synthetic polymers. These fungi not only survived but actually grew biomass while consuming plastic, signaling an evolv...