HATYAI FLOOD 2025 | A City Full Of Water, A Nation In Shock [Thai Street Food from Thailand since 2020] "This is more than a disaster; it’s a story of pain, courage, and unity. In every corner of Hatyai, people are rescuing, sharing, rebuilding, and refusing to let hope drown."
Sunday, November 30, 2025
2 videos full of footage- Downtown Hatyai turned into river- Thai Street Food channel 17 & 11-min on-the-ground reports at Heating Planet blog
HATYAI FLOOD 2025 | A City Full Of Water, A Nation In Shock [Thai Street Food from Thailand since 2020] "This is more than a disaster; it’s a story of pain, courage, and unity. In every corner of Hatyai, people are rescuing, sharing, rebuilding, and refusing to let hope drown."
Producing City of Angels Blog since Jan. 2007, first as coverage of the pedophile priest crisis in the Catholic Church as one of the survivors, then 30 other topics at CofA 1-30
Sumatra Central Aceh flood recovery Nov 30 HardCornerTV local report in Indonesian TRANSLATED w 2 transcripts at Heating Planet blog
In Central Aceh* "a truly festive place" within hours flash floods and landslides destroyed settlements and bridges, and submerged main access routes last week. Today even though the rain has subsided, the threat has not disappeared. Further landslides are still possible- READ & WATCH: Recorded! Flash Floods in Central Aceh–Bener Meriah Destroy Homes and Bridges, Trapping Thousands- transcripts below[HardCornerTV from Indonesia since 2014]
A resident's house was swept away by the current. It was the Liim Gate Bridge. When the rains refused to stop, Central Aceh, a truly festive place, turned into a sea of disaster. Thousands of homes were lost, access was completely paralyzed, and thousands of people struggled to survive. Lailahaillallah.
The heavy rains that have been pouring down on the central region of Aceh since Wednesday, November 26, brought great disaster to the people of Central Aceh, a truly festive place. Within hours, flash floods and landslides destroyed settlements, destroyed bridges, and submerged main access routes that had been vital routes between districts.
In Central Aceh, the floodwaters struck with such speed that residents had no chance to save their belongings. According to the Central Aceh Regional Disaster Management Agency (BPBD), houses suffered varying degrees of damage, from minor to complete destruction.
The flash floods also cut off bridges connecting villages and sub-districts, leaving thousands of residents trapped without access. In Bebesen District, villages such as Bebesen Mersah Toa, Paya Ilang, Juru Mudi, Vestak, and Daling bore silent witness to the ferocity of the floodwaters and landslides. Dozens of houses were buried, and kilometers of roads collapsed into the valley. Three residents, Heru, Aldi, and Yuti were found dead after being swept away by strong currents.
**You are in good health. Amen.**
Greater damage was seen in Bintang District in Konyel. Kelitu, Sintep, and the Nosar Championship Hall. More than 1,000 houses were buried in Celala. Floods destroyed hectares of rice fields, cut off roads, and buried dozens of houses. Meanwhile, in Kebayakan District, three residents died in Payat Tumpi Baru and two other victims were found buried by a landslide in the Ketol area. where a concrete bridge was also lost in the flood.
Flash floods have occurred. between the border of Rjuru Village and Ujung Gele. In addition to housing, public facilities such as elementary schools, menasah, gardens, and steel frame bridges were also damaged. In total, 1,000 heads of families are now living in evacuation centers. Spread across mosques, menasah, schools, multipurpose buildings, and residents' homes.
Bintang District is the area with the largest number of refugees, more than 1,000 families. In Benar Meriah, the situation is no less critical. The disaster in Wihdelong, Balere Delong Village, completely paralyzed access throughout the district. Power outages, communication networks were lost, and more than 1,000 bridges were destroyed, cutting off all access to Kebenar Meriah from all sides, including Central Aceh, Bireun, and Loh Sumaawe. Residents began to panic. Staple goods were sold out at kiosks and shops. Internet access was also unavailable.
On Saturday night, November 29, hundreds of residents flocked to the regent's office just to find a signal, contact family, and ask for help. In Seni Antar Village, Permata District, aid was still very limited. Residents were surviving on what they could while awaiting logistical distribution from the government, which was continuing its efforts to reach the most isolated areas such as Mesidah, Permata, and Syiah Utama. The national road connecting Nagan Raya to Central Aceh was no less severe. In Betung Ateh Banggalang, the main route was completely cut off, paralyzing mobility and prolonging the isolation of central Aceh. In Kenawat Village, residents were forced to cross by boat because the only bridge was eroded by floodwaters and no longer usable. This body is replaced by Allahu Akbar.
**Oh God, oh God. Subhanallah walhamdulillah waahaillallahu akbar changed pull Sir this up up pull**
Meanwhile in Burlah Village, Ketol District, the heroic actions of Babinsa Koramil Ketol became a light amidst the darkness of the disaster with simple equipment he opened an emergency rescue route for trapped residents helping to evacuate children and women to safety. In Totorungki, Pantan Tengah Village, Rusip Antara District. Resident documentation shows houses submerged in mud, roads cut off, and heavy equipment unable to enter to assist with the evacuation.
Residents survive with help from family, volunteers, and local residents who came independently. Enang-enang has collapsed the Takeng Birun road on the border between Benar Kelipa District and Pondok Baru District. You guys are cut off due to flash floods in Oke, this is seen Polri members from Prim Gajah Police helping sick residents. Putraga News carries the community to the two-way intersection.
Today even though the rain has subsided, the threat has not completely disappeared. Further landslides are still potential. Volunteers, the Indonesian National Armed Forces (TNI), the Regional Disaster Management Agency (BPBD), and the community continue to work to open access to areas buried by debris. They are working tirelessly to search for victims, evacuate trapped residents, and open aid routes. The government urges all residents of Acil Tengah and Benner Meriah to remain vigilant, follow the instructions of officers, and evacuate immediately if conditions become increasingly dire.Most areas are still under disaster alert status.
**Oh, my God, one house has been swept away by the current.**
This disaster is a reminder of how vulnerable communities in Aceh's hilly areas are to extreme rainfall. Amidst limitations and isolation, the spirit of mutual cooperation and solidarity is the community's greatest strength in recovering from the disaster that devastated their villages. Hurry up and move forward.
Satu rumah warga telah dibawa arus. Itu jembatan pintu liim. Ketika hujan tak kunjung redah, Aceh Tengah dan benar meriah berubah menjadi lautan bencana. Ribuan rumah hilang, akses lumpuh total, dan ribuan jiwa berjuang untuk selamat. Lailahaillallah. Hujan deras yang mengguyur wilayah tengah Aceh sejak Rabu, November membawa petaka besar bagi masyarakat Aceh Tengah dan benar meriah. Dalam hitungan jam, banjir bandang dan longsor menghancurkan pemukiman, merobohkan jembatan, serta menenggelamkan akses utama yang selama ini menjadi jalur vital antar kabupaten. Di Aceh Tengah, air bah menerjang dengan kecepatan yang tak memberi kesempatan bagi warga untuk menyelamatkan harta benda mereka. Menurut BPBD Aceh Tengah, unit rumah rusak dengan tingkatan berbeda dari ringan hingga hancur total. Banjir bandang juga memutus jembatan penghubung antar desa dan kecamatan membuat ribuan warga terjebak tanpa akses keluar. Di Kecamatan Bebesen, kampung-kampung seperti Bebesen Mersah Toa, Paya Ilang, Juru Mudi, Vestak, dan Daling menjadi saksi bisu keganasan air bah dan material longsor. Belasan rumah tertimbun dan jalan sepanjang km runtuh ke lembah. Tiga warga, Heru, Aldi, dan Yuti ditemukan meninggal setelah terseret arus deras. kamu sehat-sehat. Amin. Kerusakan lebih besar tampak di Kecamatan Bintang di Konyel. Kelitu, Sintep, dan Balai Kejuren Nosar. Lebih dari rumah terkubur tanah di Celala. Banjir menghancurkan hektar sawah, memutus jalan, dan menimbun puluhan rumah. Sementara itu, di Kecamatan Kebayakan, tiga warga meninggal di Payat Tumpi Baru dan dua korban lainnya ditemukan tertimbun longsor di wilayah Ketol. tempat jembatan beton ikut hilang di terjang banjir. Telah terjadi banjir bandang. di antara perbatasan Kampung Rjuru dengan ujung Gele tepat. Selain pemukiman, fasilitas umum seperti sekolah dasar, menasah, kebun, dan jembatan rangka baja juga mengalami kerusakan. Total . kepala keluarga kini tinggal di pengungsian. Tersebar di masjid, menasah, sekolah, gedung serbaguna, hingga rumah warga. Kecamatan Bintang menjadi wilayah dengan jumlah pengungsi terbesar lebih dari KK. Dibenar meriah situasinya tak kalah kritis. Bencana di Wihdelong, Kampung Balere Delong membuat akses seluruh kabupaten itu lumpuh total. Listrik padam, jaringan komunikasi hilang, dan lebih dari jembatan putus membuat seluruh jalur masuk Kebenar Meriah terputus dari semua sisi, baik dari Aceh Tengah, Bireun, maupun Loh Sumaawe. Warga mulai panik. Sembakau habis di kios dan toko. Akses internet juga tidak tersedia. Pada Sabtu malam, November , ratusan warga berbondong-bondong menuju kantor bupati hanya untuk mencari sinyal, sekedar menghubungi keluarga dan meminta pertolongan. Di Desa Seni Antar, Kecamatan Permata, bantuan masih sangat berbatas. Masyarakat bertahan seadanya sembari menunggu distribusi logistik dari pemerintah yang terus berupaya menjangkau wilayah paling terisolasi seperti Mesidah, Permata, dan Syiah Utama. Kondisi jalan nasional yang menghubungkan Nagan Raya Aceh Tengah pun tak kalah parah. Di Betung Ateh Banggalang. Jalur utama itu putus total melumpuhkan mobilitas dan memperpanjang isolasi wilayah tengah Aceh. Di Kampung Kenawat, warga terpaksa menyeberang menggunakan perahu karena jembatan satu-satunya tergerus banjir dan tak lagi dapat dipakai. Anu badan ini ganti Allahu Akbar. Ya Allah ya Allah. Subhanallah walhamdulillah waahaillallahu akbar berubah tarik Pak ini naik naik tarik sementara itu di Desa Burlah Kecamatan Ketol aksi heroik Babinsa Koramil Ketol menjadi terang di tengah kegelapan bencana dengan peralatan sederhana ia membuka jalur penyelamatan darurat bagi warga yang terjebak membantu mengevakuasi anak-anak dan perempuan ke tempat aman. Di Totorungki, Desa Pantan Tengah, Kecamatan Rusip Antara. Dokumentasi warga memperlihatkan rumah-rumah yang tenggelam lumpur, jalan terputus, dan alat berat belum bisa masuk untuk membantu evakuasi. Warga bertahan dengan bantuan dari keluarga, relawan, dan masyarakat sekitar yang datang secara mandiri. Enang-enang sudah tumbang jalan takeng birun di perbatasan antara Kecamatan Benar Kelipa dengan Kecamatan Pondok Baru. Kalian terputus karena banjir bandang di Oke, ini terlihat anggota Polri dari Polsek Prim Gajah membantu masyarakat yang sakit. Berita Putraga mengendong masyarakat untuk jalur dua simpang. Hari ini meski hujan telah mereda, ancaman belum sepenuhnya hilang. Longsor susulan masih berpotensi terjadi. Relawan, TNI, BPBD, serta masyarakat terus bekerja membuka akses yang tertimbun material. Mereka berjuang tanpa henti untuk mencari korban, mengevakuasi warga terjebak, dan membuka jalur bantuan. Pemerintah mengimbau semua masyarakat Acil Tengah dan Benner Meriah untuk tetap waspada mengikuti arahan petugas dan segera mengungsi jika kondisi semakin mengkhawatirkan. Karena hingga kini sebagian besar wilayah masih berada dalam status siaga bencana. Eh, jalan ni Allah habisah satu rumah warga telah di bawah arus. Bencana ini menjadi pengingat betapa rentannya masyarakat di daerah perbukitan Aceh terhadap curah hujan ekstrem. Di tengah keterbatasan dan isolasi, semangat gotongroyong dan solidaritas menjadi kekuatan terbesar masyarakat untuk bangkit dari bencana yang melurulantakkan kampung-kampung mereka. Cepat depan.
KEBLOGGER- going through queue, more reports coming shortly
Producing City of Angels Blog since Jan. 2007, first as coverage of the pedophile priest crisis in the Catholic Church as one of the survivors, then 30 other topics at CofA 1-30
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Sea ice critical engine of global climate, food supply, sea levels- Antarctica New Zealand 17-min report w Transcript at Heating Planet blog
The fast rate of sea ice loss in the Antarctic is sobering when you understand the role that it plays in our climate system. The freezing and thawing of sea ice is like a heartbeat of the planet. READ & WATCH Antarctica in a warming world, posted Nov 26 on YouTube- transcript follows:[Antarctica New Zealand is the Crown Entity responsible for developing, managing and executing Aotearoa New Zealand's activities in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean, in particular the Ross Dependency. since 2012]
RECENT RELEVANT
https://cityofangels25.blogspot.com/2025/11/antarctic-warming-stark-warning-entire.html
Antarctica in a warming world Antarctica New Zealand
TRANSCRIPTNew Zealand is one of the founding signatories to the Antarctic Treaty. But more importantly, I think New Zealand always has a really strong relationship with Antarctica in that sense of Kitiyaki Tanga, Manaki Tanga of that very special place. We want to see Antarctica preserved for the future and not only for its beauty and remoteness and special value, but also humanity depends on it.
A central theme of nearly all the work that we support in Antarctica is understanding change in particular climate change and the impact on Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.
So the reason we are so interested in Antarctica is that it is one of the critical engines of the global climate system. So what happens in Antarctica will be felt around the world very very quickly and everywhere. And this is really where the mandate for the platform came about to think about how Antarctica will change in a warming world and what its global implications are of the response of Antarctica to that warming.
The rate of warming that we're seeing is really unprecedented in the geological record. Both the atmosphere and the oceans are warming. This means it's melting the ice sheets. It's melting the sea ice. This is impacting circulation. It's impacting biological activity. And it's really unlike anything that we've seen in the recent past that we've been able to observe.
The better the science we can do, the better we can make decisions. You can't manage what you don't monitor. So we want to understand what's happening in Antarctica to guide evidence and datadriven decision-making.
2.08
We've seen the loss of sea ice in the Arctic over several decades. And so the expectation was that we would also see loss of sea ice in the Antarctic. But the rate of change, how fast it is declining is fairly sobering when you understand the role that sea ice plays in our climate system and what the potential flow on effects are not just for the ecosystem but for the whole physical system.
There's really core things that happen in Antarctica that keep the oceans working the way they do. The freezing and thawing of sea ice is like a heartbeat of the planet.
Antarctica is about 50 times the size of New Zealand. Sea ice is an apron of ice that forms from the ocean around Antarctica. Essentially, when the winter comes, the surface of the ocean starts to freeze. And then over the next few months, it will freeze to a thickness of between 1 and 2 m over an area that essentially doubles the size of Antarctica itself.
You take the sea ice away, then the front of the ice shelves and the ice on the continent around the coast is exposed to waves, to extra heating, solar radiation, you name it, it's sort of out there all of a sudden. whereas it was quite protected when there was a layer of sea ice in front of it. In the Ross Sea region, there are regular formation of polynya. They are holes in the sea ice. So the formation of these polynya which happens over days and weeks can influence how strong the circulation in the deep ocean is over decades and and centuries actually.
Many of them can be quite small, tens of kilometers in scale, but it's where you're starting off this bottom water, but also growing sea ice.
We've been monitoring the outflow of dense water in a place that's very critical for the global ocean. When we talk about ocean flux, we just mean the movement of water, the exchange of water across the Ross Sea shelf. So that exchange of water is changing the heat and the salts, the nutrients and the gases that are on the shelf and in the deep ocean.
4.42
So that's why it's a critical part of understanding what's going to happen to the Ross Sea and also what's going to happen to our global ocean. Another big achievement of the program is to put in Argo floats so we can see how the density on the shelf is evolving with time.
There's all sorts of flavors of Argo, but it's essentially sending out robots, thousands of robots throughout the oceans, and they bring in this subsurface structure every sort of 10 or so days. And it's been one of the hidden sort of secrets to why our sort of weather forecasting models are doing so much better.
The significance of the southern ocean in general for global climate is also that it is primary sink for CO2 for greenhouse gases which we emit into the atmosphere. So we need to keep the circulation in the southern ocean going otherwise we risk that the southern ocean would actually reduce its capacity to uptake that additional greenhouse gas.
I think everybody knows that we're burning fossil fuels and putting carbon dioxide into the atmosphere is the main cause of the global warming. What actually most people don't know is that of that carbon dioxide that we put into the atmosphere from burning fossil fuels, only about half of it stays there and the other half is going into the oceans and into the biosphere.
6.10
The Southern Ocean has taken up about 10% of all the CO2 that humans have produced over the last couple of hundred years. There's also biological uptake of CO2, especially around the sea ice edge. That's where phytolankton, these are photosynthesizing algae. They take up carbon from the atmosphere, turn it into organic matter, and some of that organic matter eventually sinks through the water column and makes its way to the seafloor where it's isolated from the atmosphere.
My hope is that we're able to get a better representation of sea ice. That's crucial for carbon exchange and for the processes around the Southern Ocean. So the sea ice provides this very large area that supports the very base of the food chain. What we're investigating here is the potential that platelet ice plays quite a significant role in supporting the base of the food chain for the Ross Sea ecosystem.
I like to think of it as the autumn leaves of the ocean and they float up to land against the base of the sea ice. You think of sea ice as the roof of the ocean. And so what we're trying to do here today is core through this delicate structure. If you imagine trying to core through autumn leaves and keep their structure in place, that's a good illustration of what we're trying to do.
Any changes at all to how it forms, so that means what time of the season it forms, all of those are likely to have impacts on the marine food web. Oh, lovely platelets. Yes, thank you. When you talk about benthic, that basically means anything that lives on or in or associated with the seafloor. Things like sea stars and sea urchins and fish that might feed on the seafloor can be considered benthic, too. 50 to 60% of the animals that we find on the seafloor, you don't find anywhere else in the world. What we have done in our field campaigns, we've made holes in the sea ice and then we put a remotely operated vehicle down and use that to video transacts of the seafloor across lots of different depths and at lots of different places. And we can also use those remotely operated vehicles to actually collect specimens.
8.44
We have a lot of knowledge about the Ross Sea ecosystems, but over the years, a lot of that information has come from divers, which has been quite restricted to depths shallower than 40 m or so. As we've been able to do these coastal surveys, we've actually seen really dense communities of seaweeds clearly attached, clearly living, and extracting light from the environment. And we were shocked to see how deep some of these communities were living and how dense they were in these environments. And it really changed our perspective on the spatial area that these species are covering and the potential contribution they have to the fixation and storage of carbon in these cold environments.
So warming doesn't just mean temperature. It means more fresh water. It means more sediments running off the land. Those changes could mean that there could be an increase in photosynthesis of phytolanton. That might increase carbon storage. It might mean that we get less of it. It might mean that the communities are getting less food. It might mean that they're getting more. And all of those things, we see positives in one place and negatives in another. and the balance of how that's going to impact our environment. We don't really understand yet, but we know that in a two degree world that's going to be different.
10.16
We always used to talk about climate change as being something was going to affect ecosystems. You know, it's pretty clear now that, you know, we're seeing big changes to the marine environment and we're seeing changes to species and organisms in the food web because of that. We try and look at the system as a functioning whole. So we go from the the physical oceanography, the environmental conditions that set the environment. And then we look at how that solar energy is taken up by phytoplankton. So the growth of the primary producers, they're the sort of base of the food web. And then how that energy is and organic matter is passed up through the food web.
So through the small zoo plankton the grazers into the larger zoo plankton like krill up into the small microscopic fish the small cm long fish living in the midwater column and then up into the top predators like seabirds the penguins the seals for instance and the whales; and also how that material sinks down through the water column to near the seabed. But recently, for the last five years, we've seen massive decreases in that sea ice. So, it was picking up for reasons that are not particularly clear and now it's kind of really decreasing fast. [Laughter]
11.35
But there are going to be effects through the whole of the system. For something like an Antarctic fish, the effects of that changing sea ice are probably not going to be so dramatic, but they might be affected by changes to the deep currents or the way that food is distributed on the seabed. So, they're going to be more subtle changes.
About 0.2% of Antarctica is actually ice free. And this means that it also makes Antarctica one of the largest cold habitats in the world for organisms ranging from bacteria up to nematodeses, springtails, mosses, and lychans. And these are the primary types of organisms we find in terrestrial ecosystems in Antarctica.
As it is, it's one of the most unique ecosystems in the world. Everywhere we look, we see evidence of a long-term isolation from the rest of the planet.
Antarctica is a dry continent and it's a really extreme environment and the lakes are the focal point of where life actually is really active and really dynamic. The lakes sit in what we call closed catchments. So water flows in, melt water flows in during the summer, but no water flows out. There's no rivers flowing out of most of them. If you get a change in meltwater production, then the lake level tends to go up.
And that's what's been going on for the last kind of 50=60 odd years or so at least. Changes in the structure of the lakes themselves and changes in the communities that can live in them.
As the continent warms up, it's intuitive that more water will become liquid. But where would this liquid water come from? And where is this liquid water going to go? Those are big questions. Antarctica is home to massive bodies of ice called ice sheets. There's the East Antarctic ice sheet which if all of it were to melt entirely, it would raise sea levels by over 50 m. At present, the Antarctic ice sheet is losing up to 150 gigatons of ice per year.
To put that in context, that's nearly three times Lake Topo being added to the global ocean every year. So we're constantly raising sea level from changes in the Antarctic ice sheet. And so why this matters is currently we already have issues with coastal flooding during big storm events.
14.15
Climate is a synthesis of weather events. usually describes the state of an environment under the influence of weather regimes. Our interest in Antarctic weather and climate is is really understand how weather has been changing in the past and how it will change in the future and how weather events might influence certain climate states in the future. So thinking about climate change, how particular extreme weather events, warming events happening in Antarctica could then translate into impacts on the ice environment, on the terrestrial environment and the ecosystem.
We collect our own observations. So we rely on climate and weather stations. We rely on specific field campaigns that collect surface temperature, soil temperature, soil moisture. The atmosphere over the southern oceans, it's one of the windiest, most turbulent parts of the global climate system. How those storms and winds change over the southern ocean. That's a big part of the story of how the climate will evolve over New Zealand and you other parts of the mid latitudes of the southern hemisphere.
Antarctica is really clearly such a core component of how our planet operates, how our oceans work, how our atmosphere works. and all of that ice and all of that circulation of the ocean really drive the climate of our planet as we know it.
We now have seen the emergence of extreme climate events. We saw freshwater flooding on tops of ice shelves. We have seen breeding failures of emperor penguins. Things that I think 20 years ago we just wouldn't have expected to see in our lifetimes.
Another really important trend that we have observed during that time is the recent rise and mistrust of scientific expertise and expert advice. And I think this is a really worrisome development in a time when we need scientific insights more than ever.
But we're doing it because it's needed, because it has impact, because it matters to communities, because it matters to communities in the Pacific. It matters to communities around the world. You know, what gives me hope is knowing that we're the ones causing the problem. We're doing all of this burning of fossil fuels and things. We have 100% of the power. We can turn off the tap whenever we choose to,
END
Antarctic warming faster than expected a stark warning to entire planet, affecting sea levels, weather patterns- Science Talk with Jim Massa Nov 26 w transcript at Heating Planet blog Dramatic and extreme changes are
Producing City of Angels Blog since Jan. 2007, first as coverage of the pedophile priest crisis in the Catholic Church as one of the survivors, then 30 other topics at CofA 1-30
Antarctic warming faster than expected a stark warning to entire planet, affecting sea levels, weather patterns- Science Talk with Jim Massa Nov 26 w transcript at Heating Planet blog
Dramatic and extreme changes are occurring in the Antarctic faster than expected, with consequences that will affect us all, from collapsing ice shelves, record low sea ice to powerful storms, the threats to the ecosystem in Antarctica is now reaching dangerous tipping points. READ & WATCH: Changes in Antarctica Are a Stark Warning to the World TRANSCRIPT:
0.20
Rapid changes in the Antarctic are a stark warning to the world. Hello friends, Jim here. article published in the journal oceanographic and let's see what's going on.
From collapsing ice shelves and record low sea ice to threats to fragile ecosystems, researchers warn that Antarctica is now reaching dangerous tipping points that could accelerate global heating and raise sea levels worldwide. So there was a recent meeting at the Royal Society in London and basically these scientists issued a stark warning to the rest of the world that dramatic and extreme changes are occurring in the Antarctic faster than expected, like we've never heard that before, with consequences that will affect us all from collapsing ice shelves, record low sea ice, right, powerful storms, the threats to the ecosystem.
1.30
Researchers warned that Antarctica, often seen as remote and untouched, is now reaching dangerous tipping points that it could accelerate global heating, raise sea levels, and disrupt weather patterns worldwide. The risks posed by the rapid changes across the polar region are no longer distant or theoretical. Right? You've heard me say, what happens in the Arctic does not stay in the Arctic. Well, what happens in Antarctica does not stay in Antarctica, right?
Basically, what happens in the polar regions, do not stay in the polar regions, they are going to affect the rest of the planet. So scientists have stressed this and they're outlining that extreme events are already becoming more frequent and severe with the possibility of crossing irreversible tipping points growing by the day.
Antarctica is changing faster than we ever imagined said professor Michael Meredith from the UK National Climate Science Partnership and an oceanograph oceanographer at the British Antarctic Survey BAS. They do a lot of work down there. A lot of excellent work down there.
These changes are already affecting communities and ecosystems worldwide. Urgent action to cut greenhouse gas emissions and strengthen resilience is essential if we are to avoid crossing dangerous thresholds. So the BAS director, Professor Dame Jane Francis will open the proceeding that just took place by reminding attendees that what happens in Antarctica affects us all. This includes issues of extreme weather, ecosystem loss, rising sea levels.
3.20
The southern ocean surrounding Antarctica absorbs most of the excess heat caused by greenhouse gas emissions. depends how you define most. I mean we get excess heat absorbed in the North Pacific, the North Atlantic, it gets absorbed everywhere. So we need to quantify this. This is already fueling more powerful storms, heat waves and rainfall globally that disrupt lives beyond the polar regions. Right?
Because what are cyclones? Basically heat distribution mechanisms for the planet.
Warmer waters can fuel more powerful storms. Warmer waters and warmer air that goes with it can hold more moisture leading to more precipitation. And you can- hotter air temperatures, right? You get the heat waves, but we're also getting marine heat waves.
Meanwhile, crucial species such as krill, which is the hub of the Antarctic food chain, baling whales feed on them. Deep sea corals, sponge habitats are under threat. These ecosystems support fisheries, biodiversity, even regulate the planet's carbon balance.
The biological palm, marine snow sinking, but you sequester carbon and then you have your upwelling, right? Scientists have warned that if Antarctica ice sheets pass key thresholds, sea levels could rise by more than 10 meters over the coming centuries, threatening coastal cities, communities, infrastructure across the globe, including the UK.
5.15
What's more, evidence from the past shows that change originating in the Antarctic has the potential to spread rapidly, sometimes within decades, with potentially devastating consequences globally. So, this Royal Society meeting called global impacts of climate extremes in the polar regions. Is Antarctica reaching a tipping point? That's the focus of this meeting. And at this meeting, they'll discuss how stronger links are needed between Antarctic science and global policy so governments can better prepare for the risk. Good luck. And then presumably protect future generations and help us all adapt to our challenging changing world. Thermal inertia. Anyone?
We urgently need to understand these unprecedented extreme events in Antarctica if we if we're going to make robust predictions of future change, said Kate Hendry, an oceanographer with BAS team. The process behind these extreme events and any tipping points are not incorporated well into computer models at the moment.
So, our forecasting ability is not good enough. Okay. It's good to acknowledge where the deficiencies in knowledge are present so that you can then address them.
This summer, ancient ice extracted from Antarctica arrived at the BAS in Cambridge for detailed analysis. basically made ice cores and then you then you take slices and you do all sorts of isotope fractionation measurements and and then you can look at the planktonic life that may be trapped in the ice cores and so forth.
7.18
So retrieved from depths of up to 2,800 meters at Little Dome Sea in East Antarctica, the core is expected to reveal a climate and atmospheric record that goes back more than 1.6 million years. That's good. Over the next few years, these samples will be meticulously analyzed at labs across Europe, including at the BAS to unlock secrets about Earth's climate evolution, greenhouse gas concentrations.
Dr. Dr. Liz Thomas, who's head of the ice scores team at BAS, says that our data will yield the first continuous reconstruction of key environmental indicators including atmospheric temperatures, wind patterns, sea ice extent, marine productivity over these past 1.5 million years. It will provide vital insights into the link between atmospheric CO2 levels and climate during a previously uncharted period in Earth's history, offering valuable context for predicting future changes. Okay. But we're all watching in real time ice sheets melting, ice sheets calving, big chunks of ice working their way up towards the equator where they melt and add to the sea level rise. We're already seeing that
We're seeing some indications of primary productivity declining in the southern ocean, which means krill productivity is declining, which of course, like everything else, impacts the rest of the food chain, impacts the baling whales, impacts the seals, the orcas, the penguins because if there's less secondary productivity, for example, because of decreased increase primary productivity. Well, there's not going to be kess plankton for the little fish to feed on and then there will there will be less or be fewer little fish that feeds the next size up fish and so forth.
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The polar regions are a bellweather harbinger of what's going to come. Right? We see similar things in the Arctica region, right? With of course the difference is that Antarctica is a land mass surrounded by ocean where the Arctic is an ocean surrounded by land masses. But we're seeing methane issues, both terrestrial and oceanic sources. We're seeing a decline of the sea ice. We're seeing changes in precipitation patterns, right?
It's really warming up there and that's spilling out to the rest of the planet to lower latitudes. We see similar things in Antarctica. So, we'll see what comes out of this, what they issue report and what these core it will take several years before we know, but we'll see what the core samples reveal. So, kind of an update on what's what's happening and well, we'll talk
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[KE: Everything climate scientists predicted about global warming/ climate change since the 1970s is coming true, only faster]
Part two
Sea ice critical engine of global climate, food supply, sea levels- Antarctica New Zealand 17-min report w Transcript at Heating Planet blog
Producing City of Angels Blog since Jan. 2007, first as coverage of the pedophile priest crisis in the Catholic Church as one of the survivors, then 30 other topics at CofA 1-30