Finally, there’s some good news to report from NOAA, the parent organization of the National Hurricane Center, or NHC: During the highly active 2o24 Atlantic hurricane season, the NHC made record-accurate track forecasts at every time interval (12-, 24-, 36-, 48-, 60-, 72-, 96-, and 120-hour forecasts), according to the preliminary 2024 NHC Forecast Verification Report released on Feb. 24. And 2024 research suggests that the research dollars spent since 2007 on improved hurricane forecasts could have led to over $10 billion in combined benefits just for the two major hurricanes that hit in 2024, Helene and Milton. But the budget for hurricane research could be slashed under the Trump administration.
Figure 1. Verification of official NHC hurricane track forecasts for the Atlantic, 1990-2024. (Image credit: Preliminary 2024 NHC Forecast Verification Report).
2025 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #10
Posted on 9 March 2025 by BaerbelW, Doug Bostrom, John Hartz
This week's roundup is again published by category and sorted by number of articles included in each. We are still interested in feedback to hone the categorization, so if you spot any clear misses and/or have suggestions for additional categories, please let us know in the comments. Thanks!
Stories we promoted this week, by category and number of articles shared:
Climate Change Impacts (13 articles)
- Australia’s second-hottest summer in 2024-25 ‘not possible without climate change’, scientist says 2024-25 summer at 1.89C above long-term average ‘will be one of the coolest in the 21st century’, according to one expert by Graham Readfearn, Australia News, The Guardian, Mar 1, 2025
- Weather tracker: six cyclones swirl simultaneously in southern hemisphere Bianca, Garance and Honde churn across Indian Ocean as Alfred, Rae and Seru spin through south-west Pacific by Staff, Australia News, The Guardian, Feb 28, 2025
- Ageing nuclear plant in Florida at risk from climate crisis, advocates warn Regulators extended the life of two of the oldest US reactors in Miami. Millions of people in the area are now vulnerable by Richard Luscombe , US News, The Guardian, Mar 1, 2025
- Earth’s strongest ocean current could slow down by 20% by 2050 in a high emissions future Melting Antarctic ice is releasing cold, fresh water into the ocean, which is projected to cause the slowdown by Petra Stock, Environment, Mar 3, 2025
- Half of global croplands could see a drop in suitable crops at 2C of warming More than half of global cropland areas could see a decline in the number of suitable crops under a warming scenario of 2C, new research finds. by Yanine Quiroz, Carbon Brief, Mar 04, 2025
- ‘Unusually strong’ storms bring risk of tornadoes and flash floods to US south Powerful thunderstorms likely to sweep through Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama by Nina Lakhani, US News, The Guardian, Mar 4, 2025
- Carolina wildfires followed months of weather whiplash, from drought to hurricane-fueled floods and back to drought Scores of wildfires broke out across North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia in early March 2025 as strong winds, abnormally dry conditions and low humidity combined to kindle and spread the flames. by Lauren Lowman & Nick Corak, The Conversation, Mar 05, 2025
- Is climate change supercharging Tropical Cyclone Alfred as it powers towards Australia? Cyclone Alfred formed in the Coral Sea towards the end of February when sea surface temperatures were almost 1C hotter than usual by Graham Readfearn, Australia News, Mar 5, 2025
- Major banana exporters could face `60% drop` in growing area due to warming Large-scale banana plantations in Latin America and the Caribbean could face a “dramatic” reduction in “suitable” growing area by 2080 due to rising temperatures, a new study warns. by Ayesha Tandon, Carbon Brief, Mar 06, 2025
- Cranky Stepdad vs Hydrogen For Energy: How To Respond To Enthusiasts by Michael Barnard, Clean Technica, Mar 05, 2025
- Butterflies in the U.S. are disappearing at a ‘catastrophic’ rate The number of butterflies in the contiguous United States declined by 22 percent this century, a collapse with potentially dire implications. by Dino Grandoni, Climate, Washington Post, Mar 6, 2025
- New study reveals potential cause of a ‘drought’ in violent EF5 tornadoes A quirky aspect of the way we measure twisters helps explain why there hasn’t been a top-tier-rated tornado in 12 years. by Bob Henson, Eye on the Storm, Yale Climate Connections, Mar 7, 2025
- Major banana exporters could face ‘60% drop’ in growing area due to warming Large-scale banana plantations in Latin America and the Caribbean could face a “dramatic” reduction in “suitable” growing area by 2080 due to rising temperatures, a new study warns. by Ayesha Tandon, Food & Farming, Carbon Brief, Mar 6, 2025
Fact brief - Is Greenland losing land ice?
Posted on 8 March 2025 by Sue Bin Park
Skeptical Science is partnering with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. You can submit claims you think need checking via the tipline.
Is Greenland losing land ice?
Data from satellites and expeditions confirm Greenland has been losing land ice at an accelerating rate for decades.
Glaciers gain ice via snowfall, while melting and ice breaking off into the ocean account for nearly all of Greenland’s ice-sheet loss. Rates vary season to season and year to year due to weather variation—however, multi-decade trends show ongoing loss.
Satellites launched in the early 1990s measure ice sheet height and gravity to detect changes in mass. They have found that Greenland has lost ice every year since 1998; from 2010 to 2018, average annual ice loss was six times that of the 1990s.
Greenland has lost 5,000 gigatons of ice since 2002. Rising global temperatures of about 2°F (1.1°C) since widespread fossil fuel burning began have driven the melt. Scientists warn that positive feedback loops such as the melting of methane-rich permafrost will further accelerate ice loss.
Go to full rebuttal on Skeptical Science or to the fact brief on Gigafact
This fact brief is responsive to quotes such as the one highlighted here.
Sources
NASA The Anatomy of Glacial Ice Loss
NOAA Arctic Report Card: Update for 2023 - Greenland Ice Sheet
National Academy of Sciences - Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences Forty-six years of Greenland Ice Sheet mass balance from 1972 to 2018
UCAR Greenland's Ice Is Melting
World Wildlife Fund Six ways loss of Arctic ice impacts everyone
Carbon Brief How the Greenland ice sheet fared in 2024
CNN Greenland is getting greener. That could have huge consequences for the world
The Cranky Uncle game can now be played in 16 languages!
Posted on 7 March 2025 by BaerbelW
As of March 7, 2025, the Cranky Uncle game is available in English, Dutch, German, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, Swedish, Turkish, Albanian, Macedonian, Finnish, Romanian, Catalan, Croatian and Indonesian. It can be played on iOS or Android devices as well as in the browser. More languages are already in the queue and this blog post will be updated whenever a new language gets launched. In addition, there may be language specific announcements linked via the flag-icons at the top. These will be created by the translator teams and will most likely go into more language specific details or explain some particularly tricky or interesting translation challenges.
As this article is rather long, you can jump to the different sections via these links:
New languages and features - Brief recap - Under the hood - Cultural aspects - Creative translations - Ambiguities - Credits - Support
New languages and features
March 2025: for version 3.9 we added Catalan, Croatia and Indonesian to the Cranky Uncle game which can now be played in 16 languages! Another language - Polish - is currently going through testing and we hope to announce its availabilty in the next version.
May 2024: for version 3.8 we added Romanian to the Cranky Uncle game which can now be played in 13 languages! In addition, some features from Cranky Uncle Vaccine have been made available over the last months. There's now a "back button" to navigate back to an earlier screen and the "onboarding" will happen before the initial option to participate in the research.
December 2023: for version 3.4 we added Finnish to the Cranky Uncle game which can now be played in 12 languages!
July 2023: for version 3.3. we added Albanian and Macedonian to the Cranky Uncle game which can now be played in 11 languages! Cranky Uncle is for sure a polyglot by now!
April 2023: for version 3.2 we added Turkish to the Cranky Uncle game which can now be played in 9 languages! In addition, we added a page to list the Cranky resources available in different languages, which may come in handy for presentations and/or workshops.
December 2022: for version 3.1 we added French, Italian and Swedish to the Cranky Uncle game which can now be played in 8 languages!
August 2022: With the addition of Spanish and Portuguese, v3.0 of the Cranky Uncle game can now be played in 5 languages! In addition to adding new languages, this version of the game also eliminates the need to login with an email-address or groupcode.
February 2022: The multi-lingual v2.0 was launched with German and Dutch as the first two languages the game could be played in apart from English.
A brief recap of the game's history and motivation
It’s been a long journey to get us to this point. We ran our initial crowd-funding campaign back in January 2020 and thanks to generous donors, we worked with creative agency Goodbeast to develop and launch v1.0 of the game in December 2020. Our next goal had always been to develop a multilingual version of the Cranky Uncle game and thanks to some additional funding support from Monash University, Cranky Uncle initially learned Dutch and German and started to teach people how to identify the science denial techniques in these two languages in February 2022. More languages have been added since then and the updates are listed at the top of this article.
The Cranky Uncle game adopts an active inoculation approach, where a Cranky Uncle cartoon character mentors players to learn the techniques of science denial. Cranky Uncle is a free game available on smartphones for iPhone (sks.to/crankyiphone) and Android (sks.to/crankyandroid) as well as web browsers (sks.to/crankybrowser). The player’s aim is to become a “cranky uncle”—a science denier who skillfully applies a variety of logically flawed argumentation techniques to reject the conclusions of the scientific community. By adopting the mindset of a cranky uncle, the player develops a deeper understanding of science denial techniques, thus acquiring the knowledge to resist misleading persuasion attempts in the future. More information about the game and its scientific background is available in the article “Teaching students how to spot climate misinformation using a cartoon game” published in the journal Plus Lucis.