
NEW YORK, Wednesday, July 10, 2025 (7:00 AM local time) — New NASA satellite data has uncovered a disturbing rise in extreme weather events worldwide over the past five years, with 2024 alone witnessing double the average number of such occurrences seen between 2003 and 2020. According to recent analysis shared by The Guardian, the GRACE orbiter — NASA’s Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment — is painting a sobering picture of a planet under pressure.
Extreme events in 2024 set record highs
What’s especially concerning, say scientists, isn’t just the frequency of these events, but also their intensity and duration. From raging wildfires in the western United States to historic floods in South Asia, the recent patterns mark an acceleration that many experts find unsettling.
“It’s extremely scary,” remarked Christopher Gasson, head of Global Water Intelligence, reflecting the anxiety growing among environmental scientists. While researchers caution that it may be too early to label this a long-term trend, they point to a clear correlation: rising global temperatures driven by human activity, particularly the burning of fossil fuels, appear to be the catalyst.
Heat fuels extreme rainfall, wildfires, and drought
The Earth’s average temperature is climbing fast, and that heat is having measurable impacts. Extreme heatwaves, prolonged droughts, torrential rainfall, and catastrophic flooding are becoming more common and more severe. These events are directly tied to the warming climate, which is amplifying natural patterns beyond historical norms.
In California, for instance, increasing wildfire risk has forced many insurance companies to abandon coverage in high-risk zones, leaving homeowners exposed to potential losses. Meanwhile, farmers across the globe are battling reduced yields and devastated crops due to unpredictable weather swings.
Professor Richard Betts from Exeter University voiced a stark warning: “The world isn’t prepared for the changes in intense rainfall and drought that are now occurring.”
Environmental pressure rising across the United States
Throughout the United States, from the drought-stricken Southwest to the storm-lashed Southeast, communities are struggling to adapt to a new climate reality. In Texas, Arizona, and parts of the Midwest, daily high temperatures in recent weeks have soared past 105°F (40.5°C). The Northeast, typically spared the brunt of extreme heat, is now seeing record-breaking summer humidity paired with violent afternoon thunderstorms.
Even in urban centers like New York City, the Urban Heat Island effect is compounding the crisis, as blacktop and concrete retain warmth overnight, keeping nighttime lows dangerously high — often above 80°F (26.7°C).
As this pattern continues, the risks to public health, food security, and infrastructure resilience will only grow more urgent.

