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ATHENS (Reuters) -Mediterranean Sea temperatures surged in June in a marine heatwave, with a Greek scientist warning some species are under threat in what has likely been a record period. The EU’s ...
Intense marine heat can have devastating consequences for ecosystems with its ripple effects also extending onto land. View ...
According to the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, Europe is warming at twice the global average, making it the fastest ...
Large parts of the Mediterranean Sea are 5-10 degrees Fahrenheit above normal, with some recent readings in the 10-15 degrees ...
In just over 20 years, the northward shift of the subtropical jet stream—a high-altitude airflow—caused by climate change has reduced primary production in the northwestern Mediterranean by ...
Government has announced it will host a regional ministerial conference on climate change this September, bringing together Mediterranean countries for the first time to address the rising risks from ...
Minister Miriam Dalli stated that the Mediterranean, and therefore also Malta, is particularly facing the threats brought by the climate crisis. "Individual solutions are not enough.
And now climate change is ratcheting up the pressure. Mauro Randone, WWF-Mediterranean Regional Projects Manager, says: “ The Mediterranean is warming 20 per cent faster than the rest of the planet, ...
The intensity of these extreme precipitation events is likely to increase in the coming decades, said Leone Cavicchia, a scientist at the Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change. That is ...
But disasters of this scale are likely in future as climate change worsens. Most Mediterranean climate regions will experience a 5–10% decline in precipitation this century.