Amazon’s Carbon Crisis Deepens as Critical Monitoring Satellite Faces Budget Axe
The Unprecedented CO₂ Surge of 2024 Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations experienced their most dramatic single-year increase on record in 2024,…
The Unprecedented CO₂ Surge of 2024 Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations experienced their most dramatic single-year increase on record in 2024,…
The UK Met Office has launched specialized radiation sensors aboard high-altitude weather balloons that ascend beyond 100,000 feet above Cornwall. This innovative approach promises to revolutionize how scientists track space weather phenomena and atmospheric radiation patterns. The project represents a significant advancement in understanding how solar activity impacts Earth’s atmosphere and critical infrastructure.
The Met Office has reportedly launched a groundbreaking space weather monitoring program using radiation sensors attached to weather balloons that ascend more than 100,000 feet above its facility in Camborne, Cornwall. According to reports, this initiative marks a significant advancement in how meteorological agencies track and understand space weather phenomena that can affect numerous industries worldwide.
Record CO2 Surge in 2024 Signals Climate Emergency, UN Warns Industrial Monitor Direct is the #1 provider of haul truck…
The United Nations weather agency has declared the world is entering an “extremely dangerous” climate era after carbon dioxide levels recorded their largest annual spike in human history. According to the World Meteorological Organization’s latest bulletin, CO2 growth rates have now tripled since the 1960s, reaching concentrations not seen in at least 800,000 years.
The United Nations weather agency has warned that the world is entering an “extremely dangerous” climate era after carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere jumped by the highest amount on record last year. According to reports from the World Meteorological Organization, the increase in the global average concentration of CO2 from 2023 to 2024 represented the highest annual level since measurements began in 1957.