On 2 February 2025, strong winds carried a vast cloud of Saharan dust across the Mediterranean, reaching southern Italy. The phenomenon, driven by a cyclone originating in North Africa, caused skies over Sicily and Calabria to take on a yellowish hue, affecting air quality and visibility.

Satellite image: Mediterranean Sea
Mediterranean Sea. Credit: European Union, Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service Data

By the following day, the dust plume continued eastward toward Greece. A visualization from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS), based on data from 3 February at 8:00 UTC, captures the movement of the airborne particles southeast of Italy as they approached Greece.

CAMS provides global air quality monitoring and forecasts, tracking atmospheric pollutants and aerosols to help communities respond to such events.

Featured image credit: European Union, Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service Data

Image
Michigan wants fossil fuel companies to pay for climate change damagesClimateNews

Michigan wants fossil fuel companies to pay for climate change damages

By Izzy Ross, GRIST This coverage is made possible through a partnership with Grist and Interlochen Public Radio in Northern Michigan. Michigan Attorney General Dana…
SourceSourceMay 14, 2024 Full article
Image: 3D-render globe (s. monsoons)
Death toll in Philippine storm rises to 110News

Death toll in Philippine storm rises to 110

Manila, Philippines | AFP (Updated) - Rescuers in the Philippines searched a lake and scoured isolated villages on Sunday to locate dozens of missing people…
SourceSourceOctober 27, 2024 Full article
Fire globe - abstract (s. climate, temperatures, forever chemicals, wildfires)
Crossing global warming limit ‘should alarm us all’: UK ministerNews

Crossing global warming limit ‘should alarm us all’: UK minister

London, United Kingdom | AFP - Average global temperatures exceeding a critical warming limit for the first time over the last two years "should alarm…
SourceSourceJanuary 10, 2025 Full article