Muhammad Qadri Anwar/Shutterstock
High humidity, terrain and wind make rain forecasting particularly tricky in the tropics.
Graham Hunt/Alamy Stock Photo
The UK is no stranger to drought – especially southern England.
Breakdown in local canal that led to micro-drought situation in Humpata (Huíla).
Ruy Blanes
Despite international and national responses to the drought, the situation is dire. The government’s response is a lesson in how not to deal with drought.
At least 9 inches of rain across eastern Kentucky became floodwater that swept through neighborhoods in July 2022.
Leandro Lozada/AFP via Getty Images
Extreme downpours caught people off guard from Las Vegas to Kentucky in July 2022.
Fast-moving floodwater obliterated sections of major roads through Yellowstone National Park in 2022.
Jacob W. Frank/National Park Service
Extreme downpours brought deadly flooding to the Appalachian region, just a few weeks after the destructive Yellowstone River flood.
Mick Tsikas/AAP
Again, thousands of residents in Western Sydney face a life-threatening flood disaster. Obviously, nature is a major culprit – but other drivers are also at play.
A man sits next to dead livestock in the village of Hargududo, Ethiopia, where there’s hardly been a drop of rain in 18 months.
Eduardo Soteras/AFP via Getty Images
The ongoing humanitarian crisis raises serious questions about future food and water security in the Horn of Africa.
NASA
Global warming is changing the high-altitude autumn winds over southeast Australia, which means less rain and trouble for air travel.
Meteorologist Todd Dankers monitors weather patterns in Boulder, Colorado, Oct. 24, 2018.
Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post via Getty Images
Would you trust a weather forecast made by a machine that had learned how weather systems behaved by reviewing thousands of past weather maps?
Alien trees threaten biodiversity, increase the risk of wildfires and also guzzle water.
Photo courtesy Cape Winelands Biosphere Reserve
Clearing alien trees from mountain catchments is a more cost-effective approach to providing water than building and maintaining desalination plants.
Julia Sudnitskaya/Shutterstock
New data has revealed rainfall records from as far back as 1677.
Jason O'Brien/AAP
By following moisture from the oceans to the land, researchers worked out exactly how three oceans conspire to deliver deluges of rain to eastern Australia.
Shutterstock
Tree rings are ‘nature’s weather stations’ and reveal far more of the Daly River’s history than scientific records can.
Flooding in Gympie, Queensland, February 26, 2022.
AAP Image/Supplied by Brett's Drone Photography
A weather system called ‘atmospheric rivers’ is causing this inundation. In March last year, an atmospheric river brought 800kg of water vapour over Sydney every second.
Southern Africa’s summer rainfall regions currently experiencing the wet-season will likely continue having wetter than normal conditions.
SimpleImages/Getty Images
Southern Africa’s current above-average rainfall is a climate variability signal - a short-term fluctuation in average wet-season conditions.
Brendan Esposito/AAP
A draft plan for Sydney’s water supplies includes expanding desalination and potentially adding highly treated sewage to drinking water. All options must be on the table as the climate warms.
Wildfires that swept through Sequoia National Forest in California in September 2021 were so severe they killed ancient trees that had adapted to survive fires.
AP Photo/Noah Berger
US disasters in 2021 told a tale of two climate extremes. A climate scientist explains why wet areas are getting wetter and dry areas drier.
Some places rarely see the sun.
Donat Photography / EyeEm
Extended periods of rain are most likely found in locations where mountains are near oceans.
Rain falls in Sarek National Park, in Sweden.
(Shutterstock)
New climate simulations show that there will be more rain and less snow falling in the Arctic by the end of the century, particularly in the fall and winter.
A rainy day in Baffin Island, northern Canada.
Petr Kahanek / shutterstock
Some Arctic regions will see more rain than snow decades earlier than previously thought, say scientists.