Paris, France (AFP) – UN climate chief Simon Stiell has warned that the destructive consequences of global warming are “not a tomorrow problem” after Hurrican Beryl swept across several Caribbean islands.

Stiell hails from the island of Carriacou which took a direct hit early Monday as Beryl barrelled through, dumping heavy rain and unleashing devastating winds.

His late grandmother’s home was among those destroyed while his parents’ property also suffered damage, Stiell’s office said.

Beryl has strengthened into the earliest category 5 storm in the Atlantic on record, according to the US National Hurricane Centre (NHC) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), and is hurtling toward Jamaica.

Stiell said whether the hurricane in his homeland or floods and heatwaves elsewhere in the world, climate change was “pushing disasters to record-breaking new levels of destruction”.

“This is not a tomorrow problem,” the executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change said late Monday.

“This is happening right now in every economy… disasters on a scale that used to be the stuff of science fiction are becoming meteorological facts, and the climate crisis is the chief culprit.”

The NHC said Carriacou bore the brunt of the storm’s “extremely dangerous eyewall” that brought sustained winds at upwards of 150 mph (240 kph).

Grenada’s Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell said the island was “flattened” in half an hour and that it wasn’t clear yet if anyone had been killed in the trail of destruction.

Stiell said the “colossal climate costs” inflicted by natural disasters had now reached the level of a national security threat “from the smallest islands to the biggest G20 economies”.

Wealthy nations have agreed to pay $100 billion annually to help the developing world adapt to climate change and switch to clean energy but experts say trillions will be needed in the years to come.

It is expected a new finance target will be set at the UN COP29 summit in Azerbaijan in November, though divisions over the size and scope of that goal have frustrated negotiations.

bl-np/chf/ach

© Agence France-Presse

Featured image: Hurricane Beryl – July 2024 Credit: NOAA Goes East satellite

Image: Man cycling outdoors with his bike and helmet
Tour de France heat stress risk rises as climate warmsClimate

Tour de France heat stress risk rises as climate warms

An analysis of 50 years of climate data shows that the race has so far avoided the most extreme conditions, although the risk is steadily…
SourceSourceFebruary 24, 2026 Full article
Image: Annual surface air temperature anomalies for the Arctic region (north of 40°N) for each year from 2002 to 2025, relative to the average for the 1991–2020 reference period
2025 ranked as third hottest yearNewsFacts

2025 ranked as third hottest year

Global temperatures remained near historic highs in 2025, making it the third hottest year ever recorded and extending a run of exceptional warmth that now…
Muser NewsDeskMuser NewsDeskJanuary 14, 2026 Full article
Image
Who’s fuelling the transition to greener energy?Climate

Who’s fuelling the transition to greener energy?

By James Goldie, 360info in Melbourne China still processes the biggest share of the critical minerals needed for the transition to greener sources of energy but other…
SourceSourceJuly 29, 2024 Full article