Financial Shockwaves: How Climate Disasters Are Reshaping Global Markets
The Unraveling of Risk Management When State Farm and Allstate began withdrawing from California’s highest-risk wildfire zones, they weren’t just…
The Unraveling of Risk Management When State Farm and Allstate began withdrawing from California’s highest-risk wildfire zones, they weren’t just…
The World Meteorological Organization announced carbon emissions surged by a record 3.5ppm in 2024, marking the largest annual increase since 1957. Human activities and wildfires outpaced the diminishing carbon absorption capacity of oceans and land ecosystems.
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has delivered a sobering climate update, revealing that global carbon emissions reached an all-time high in 2024. According to their annual Greenhouse Gas Bulletin, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations jumped by 3.5 parts per million between 2023 and 2024—the largest single-year increase since modern record-keeping began in 1957. This alarming acceleration underscores the growing gap between emission reduction targets and actual atmospheric changes.
From groundbreaking lunar sunrises to swirling Martian dust storms, 2025 has delivered extraordinary celestial imagery that transforms our cosmic perspective.…