
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The year 2020 started with wildfires raging across parts of Australia, exceptional floods in East Africa, and a heatwave in the Arctic. Extremes persisted through the year in the north - where wild fires consumed record areas in Siberia, and the Arctic ice reached record lows. Death Valley saw the highest reliable temperature yet recorded on the planet, while the Atlantic saw the most active hurricane season on record. An extreme year by many measures, and one that could end up as the hottest on record globally. Roland Pease asks what it tells us about global warming.
Picture credit: Wegener Institute / Steffen Graupner
By BBC World Service4.4
939939 ratings
The year 2020 started with wildfires raging across parts of Australia, exceptional floods in East Africa, and a heatwave in the Arctic. Extremes persisted through the year in the north - where wild fires consumed record areas in Siberia, and the Arctic ice reached record lows. Death Valley saw the highest reliable temperature yet recorded on the planet, while the Atlantic saw the most active hurricane season on record. An extreme year by many measures, and one that could end up as the hottest on record globally. Roland Pease asks what it tells us about global warming.
Picture credit: Wegener Institute / Steffen Graupner

7,766 Listeners

1,066 Listeners

5,474 Listeners

1,823 Listeners

971 Listeners

1,799 Listeners

1,049 Listeners

2,071 Listeners

609 Listeners

765 Listeners

89 Listeners

404 Listeners

428 Listeners

825 Listeners

736 Listeners

229 Listeners

333 Listeners

360 Listeners

479 Listeners

243 Listeners

3,224 Listeners

745 Listeners

115 Listeners

1,041 Listeners