Washington, United States (AFP) – Climate change intensified the rains and winds of Hurricane Helene by around 10 percent, according to a study published Wednesday, after the September storm killed more than 230 people in the southeast United States.

The study by the World Weather Attribution group (WWA) also showed that fossil fuels — which are primarily responsible for global warming — made a hurricane like Helene 2.5 times more likely.

la/bjt/md

© Agence France-Presse

Featured image: True color imagery of Tropical Storm Helene on Sept. 24, 2024 Credit: NASA/NOAA | Suomi NPP satellite

Satellite Image: Colombo area, Sri Lanka
Image of the day: Flood impact near Sri Lanka’s capital after Cyclone DitwahNews

Image of the day: Flood impact near Sri Lanka’s capital after Cyclone Ditwah

Extensive flooding swept across Sri Lanka at the end of November 2025 after Cyclone Ditwah brought days of intense rainfall to the island nation in…
Muser NewsDeskMuser NewsDeskDecember 3, 2025 Full article
Image
Nuclear powers have ‘responsibility’ to uphold nuclear taboo: Nobel committeeNews

Nuclear powers have ‘responsibility’ to uphold nuclear taboo: Nobel committee

Oslo, Norway (AFP) - The Norwegian Nobel Committee said Friday that nuclear powers had a special "responsibility" to uphold the taboo against the use of…
SourceSourceOctober 11, 2024 Full article
Image: Still life of world intellectual property day (s. biopiracy, patent)
Agreement reached at UN on biopiracy treatyNews

Agreement reached at UN on biopiracy treaty

Geneva, Switzerland | AFP More than 190 nations agreed Friday on a new treaty to combat so-called biopiracy and regulate patents stemming from genetic resources…
SourceSourceMay 24, 2024 Full article