Extreme Weather Events: 2025 Recap + 2026 Predictions
Climate change drives extreme weather. Fossil fuels push temperatures higher. As a result, disasters intensify globally.
First, 2025 saw record wildfires in Los Angeles. Carbon pollution dried landscapes. Moreover, winds fueled massive flames. This became the costliest fire ever.
Next, Texas endured deadly flash floods. Drought switched to heavy rain. However, warmer air carried more moisture. Consequently, over 135 people died.
Then, Hurricane Melissa hit as Category 5. It ravaged Jamaica in October. For example, winds set new records. Climate change boosted its power.
Additionally, Southeast Asia faced huge floods. Cyclones overlapped with monsoons. As a result, thousands lost lives. Vulnerable areas drowned quickly.
Furthermore, global heatwaves shattered records. Europe and Asia baked longer. However, adaptation struggled. Vulnerable groups suffered hardest.
Finally in 2025, Arctic warmed unusually. Ocean heat sparked more storms. Therefore, risks escalated.
Now for 2026 predictions – experts warn worse. Global temperatures likely top records again. UK Met Office forecasts around 1.46°C above pre-industrial. Moreover, 2026 may rank second or third hottest ever.
Heatwaves grow deadlier. Southern Europe, South Asia, Middle East face longer extremes. As a result, urban areas risk mass heat deaths.
Compound disasters rise. Drought + floods hit same regions. For example, wildfires follow heavy rains.
Heavy rainfall intensifies. Flood risks surge worldwide. However, La Niña fades – neutral or El Niño may return. Consequently, patterns shift unpredictably.
Wildfires threaten more areas. Drier conditions spread flames faster. Moreover, air quality worsens from smoke.
Food disruptions loom. Crop failures hit vulnerable nations. As a result, prices spike globally.
Key takeaway: Human emissions worsen everything. Geography exposes coasts and dry zones most. Furthermore, insurance costs explode. This topic pulls high CPM from environment, news, insurance ads.
Act now – cut emissions fast. Adaptation saves lives. 2026 tests our readiness.