- Robert Jennings, InnerSelf.com
- Read Time: 5 mins

The Atlantic basin has been a stage for an increasingly perilous drama in the last half-century. Hurricanes, the titans of tropical weather, are intensifying faster than ever, according to a new analysis published in Scientific Reports.




















The wild storms that recently raged across eastern Victoria caused major property and environmental damage, and loss of lives. They’ve also triggered serious water contamination incidents.
It might be summer in New Zealand but we’re in for some wild weather this week with forecasts of heavy wind and rain, and a plunge in temperatures.
Polar lows are particularly challenging to forecast due to their small size and short lifetime, and many questions remain unanswered.
Over the past three years, I’ve been working on the forthcoming report by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Yet again, large swathes of New South Wales are underwater. A week of solid rain has led to floods in the Mid-North Coast, Sydney and the Central Coast, with several areas being evacuated as I write.
Springtime in the U.S. is frequently a season for thunderstorms, which can spawn tornadoes. These large storms are common in the South and Southeast in March and April
























