The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has announced it will no longer track the cost of climate change-fueled weather disasters beyond 2024. This significant policy shift affects NOAA's Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters database, which has documented hundreds of major events across the United States since 1980, totaling trillions of dollars in damage. NOAA Communications Director Kim Doster stated the change aligns with evolving priorities, statutory mandates, and staffing changes.
Scientists continue to warn that extreme weather events are becoming increasingly frequent, costly, and severe due to climate change. Recent examples include debilitating heat waves, Hurricane Milton, Southern California wildfires, and severe cold spells.
Looking ahead to the remainder of May 2025, the Climate Prediction Center forecasts well above average temperatures across most of the northern, central, and eastern parts of the nation, as well as southern Alaska. Precipitation patterns show a mixed outlook, with above-average rainfall expected from the Southern Plains into the Intermountain West, while the Great Lakes region and parts of the Northern Plains may experience below-average precipitation.
Drought conditions are projected to persist across the Southwest and northern Plains in May, though some improvement is anticipated in the central Great Basin. The upper Mississippi Valley might see drought development, while drought conditions in the Carolinas and western Virginia will likely persist and expand.
Wildfire risk for May is elevated in parts of the Southwest, upper Mississippi Valley, and from the Mid-Atlantic coastal regions down to Florida.
On the international front, the GenZero Climate Summit 2025 is currently underway in Singapore from May 5-8. Under the theme "Overcoming Paralysis," the summit focuses on addressing inaction and indecision on climate initiatives. The event includes specialized forums such as a Carbon Regulatory Roundtable and a CEO Gathering bringing together leaders from climate solutions companies, technology firms, and government representatives to discuss carbon market resilience.
Meanwhile, ENSO conditions in the tropical Pacific remain neutral, with experts expecting this pattern to continue throughout the Northern Hemisphere summer.