Welcome to Carbon Brief’s DeBriefed.
An essential guide to the week’s key developments relating to climate change.
This week
Intensifying hurricanes
STILL POWERFUL: Hurricane Milton made landfall in Florida on Wednesday “weakening but still tremendously powerful”, the Guardian reported, bringing “catastrophic winds likely to cause significant property damage” and leaving “nearly 3m homes and businesses…without power”. At least 16 people were killed across the state, officials told CBS News. Bloomberg noted that the US “has been hit by five hurricanes so far this year”.
2.5 TIMES MORE FREQUENT: Record-breaking sea temperatures across the Gulf of Mexico are a key driver of the intense hurricanes devastating the region this year, Carbon Brief reported (see more below). The Independent covered new World Weather Attribution analysis finding that hurricanes as intense as Hurricane Helene, the second most deadly US storm in history which made landfall just days before Milton, “are now about 2.5 times more frequent” because of human-caused climate change.
GLOBAL CRISIS: Elsewhere, “unprecedented” flooding in Niger killed 339 people and displaced more than 1.1 million, Radio France Internationale said, adding that “neighbouring Mali [saw] over 40 people killed and thousands displaced”. Floods and landslides in Bosnia killed at least 22 people, Le Monde reported. Finally, in Bangladesh, five people died and more than 100,000 were stranded by floods, Reuters said.
Oil rush
AMBITION ABANDONED: BP will abandon its “ambitious target” to cut oil and gas production by 40% by 2030, the Times reported, with the move expected to be formalised in February. The newspaper added that BP is “battl[ing] to close a valuation gap” with industry rivals and faces pressure from investors to increase fossil fuel production and “stop investing in any more ill-conceived wind projects”. (Any new fossil fuel projects globally are incompatible with keeping global warming at 1.5C.)
RACE TO THE BOTTOM: India will “radically reform regulations and invite foreign oil majors to explore both onshore and offshore [opportunities]” as the country “races to extract as much oil as possible while there remains a market”, according to the Financial Times. The newspaper noted that oil companies hope India’s strong economic growth forecast “will underpin future demand”.
UNLIKELY CHAMPIONS: In the US, oil companies are lobbying Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump “not to slash provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act”, the Wall Street Journal said, as many of them benefit from the law’s provision of billions of dollars in “tax credits vital for their investments in renewable fuel, carbon capture and hydrogen”.
Around the world
- NO-SHOWS: Ahead of COP29, the EU has called for a phaseout of “inefficient fossil fuel subsidies that do not address energy poverty or just transitions”, ENDS Europe reported. Meanwhile, Bank of America, BlackRock, Standard Chartered, Deutsche Bank and other financial institutions will “skip” COP29, the Financial Times said.
- STREAMLINING: COP16 host Colombia is pushing for the United Nations to combine the COPs for climate change, biodiversity and desertification in order to avoid “wasting time” and create “synergies” in countries’ climate plans, according to Reuters.
- NEW RULES: The UN has developed a compulsory mechanism that aims to prevent carbon credit project developers from breaching human rights or causing environmental damage with their activities, Climate Home News reported.
- ‘CATASTROPHIC’ DECLINE: Wildlife populations have dropped by a “catastrophic” average rate of 73% over the past 50 years, according to a World Wild Fund for Nature (WWF) report covered by the Washington Post.
- TWO EXTREMES: The World Meteorological Organization found that 2023 was the “driest year in more than three decades for the world’s rivers”, the Associated Press said. At the same time, the Financial Times reported, rising temperatures “helped drive extreme rainfall events” in September.
5,500
The amount of new renewable energy capacity, in gigawatts, to be added globally between 2024 and 2030, 2.6 times greater than total additions between 2017 and 2023, according to a new report by the International Energy Agency.
Latest climate research
- The presence of permafrost almost halves riverbank erosion rates in an Arctic river, according to a study published in Nature.
- Research in Nature Climate Change found that, even if global warming is limited to 1.5C, climate change’s impact will increase inequality by an average of 1.4 points of the Gini index, the most common measure of income disparity, by the end of the century.
- A new study in Nature Climate Change estimated that climate change will increase the risk of whale sharks, the world’s largest fish, crossing into global shipping routes and colliding with vessels.
(For more, see Carbon Brief’s in-depth daily summaries of the top climate news stories on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.)
Captured

The amount of heat stored in the waters of the Gulf of Mexico has reached record levels this month amid an unprecedented marine heatwave. These temperatures, themselves made 200-500 times more likely by climate change, played a key role in causing the hurricanes devastating the US this year to be more intense, according to a new study covered by Carbon Brief. The hurricanes Helene and Milton, which struck the US within two weeks of each other, were made more powerful by passing over the gulf, due to the hotter ocean water passing more energy to the storms and making them intensify more quickly.
Spotlight
How Scotland is protecting its ancient stone circles from climate change
This week, Carbon Brief explores what climate change means for a 5,000-year-old monument in Orkney.
Orkney, in the north of Scotland, is famous for its neolithic monuments, including the Ring of Brodgar, the largest stone circle in Scotland.
Historic Environment Scotland (HES), a public body that maintains Scotland’s historic sites, encourages tourists to help monitor the monument for signs of the impact of climate change through the citizen science programme Monument Monitor.
Carbon Brief interviews Dr Mairi Davies, climate change policy manager at HES, about the impact of climate change on the site and the effectiveness of citizen science in combating it.
Carbon Brief: What impact has climate change had on the Ring of Brodgar?
Mairi Davies: In 2019, we hosted a workshop in Orkney to apply the Climate Vulnerability Index (CVI), a methodology developed to rapidly assess climate impacts for all types of world heritage properties, to the Heart of Neolithic Orkney World Heritage site (HONO), which includes the Ring of Brodgar.
HONO was determined to be extremely vulnerable to the impacts of three key climate drivers: sea level change; precipitation change; and storm intensity and frequency change.
Increased footfall at the Ring of Brodgar is interacting with changes in precipitation patterns – primarily increased precipitation, but also periods of very dry weather – which has led to serious and increasing footfall erosion, threatening the fabric of the site.
CB: What inspired HES to turn to citizen science to monitor these impacts? And has it been effective?
MD: We care for a diverse estate of properties, many of which are in remote areas. While we undertake regular site inspection visits, we can’t be everywhere at once.
Since launching in 2018, Monument Monitor has been a really useful tool for aiding conservation work across the sites we care for, as well as fostering engagement with visitors and local communities alike. Using pictures sent to us by visitors, we’ve been able to model how climate change is affecting flooding at Machrie Moor Standing Stone Circle in Arran, as well as measuring the impact of increased visitor footfall at Clava Cairns…At the Ring of Brodgar, visitor photos are helping us record how well the site can drain after increasing incidences of extreme weather.

CB: What more needs to be done to protect Scotland’s neolithic heritage from climate impacts?
MD: Over the last few years at the Ring of Brodgar, we have undertaken an extensive programme…to create more resilient footpaths for visitors. Balancing access at the Ring of Brodgar, especially to the inner ring, with conservation is now a key issue for site management, with periods of partial site closure required to allow areas of footpath to recover.
Projects such as SCAPE (Scotland’s Coastal Archaeology and the Problem of Erosion) work with the public to research and promote the eroding archaeological remains on Scotland’s coasts.
More broadly, HES will continue its work with communities and partners across Scotland to investigate the impacts of climate change on our historic sites and to support climate adaptation. Our Guide to Climate Impacts identifies many of the risks and hazards of climate change that are facing Scotland’s historic environment and offers owners, local communities and carers of historic sites routes to…enhance resilience to climate change.
The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Watch, read, listen
EUROPE’S FUTURE: The Columbia Energy Exchange podcast spoke with European commissioner for energy Kadri Simson about the EU’s energy strategy following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
BY THE NUMBERS: The Associated Press interviewed the founder of consulting firm Rystad Energy about why he believed technology is key to “containing climate change”.
CHINA NDC: An op-ed in Foreign Policy argued that China must avoid setting “weak” targets in its 2035 climate commitments, adding it “is in China’s own interest” to include ambitious goals.
Coming up
- 13 October: Lithuania parliamentary elections (first round)
- 14-16 October: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) scoping meeting for carbon dioxide removal, Copenhagen, Denmark
- 16 October: IEA 2024 World Energy Outlook report launch
Pick of the jobs
- Ellen MacArthur Foundation, senior editor | Salary: £39,000. Location: Cowes, Isle of Wight or remote
- Oxford Economics, lead economist – climate consulting | Salary: Unknown. Location: Oxford or London
- Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, policy analyst and research advisor to Prof Lord Nicholas Stern | Salary: £40,229-£48,456. Location: London
- Bloomberg, Bloomberg Green editor | Salary: $120,000-160,000. Location: New York
DeBriefed is edited by Daisy Dunne. Please send any tips or feedback to debriefed@carbonbrief.org.
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The post DeBriefed 11 October 2024: Hurricane Milton; BP abandons oil reduction target; Scotland’s ancient stone circles and climate change appeared first on Carbon Brief.
Climate Change
What Is the Economic Impact of Data Centers? It’s a Secret.
N.C. Gov. Josh Stein wants state lawmakers to rethink tax breaks for data centers. The industry’s opacity makes it difficult to evaluate costs and benefits.
Tax breaks for data centers in North Carolina keep as much as $57 million each year into from state and local government coffers, state figures show, an amount that could balloon to billions of dollars if all the proposed projects are built.
Climate Change
GEF raises $3.9bn ahead of funding deadline, $1bn below previous budget
The Global Environment Facility (GEF), a multilateral fund that provides climate and nature finance to developing countries, has raised $3.9 billion from donor governments in its last pledging session ahead of a key fundraising deadline at the end of May.
The amount, which is meant to cover the fund’s activities for the next four years (July 2026-June 2030), falls significantly short of the previous four-year cycle for which the GEF managed to raise $5.3bn from governments. Since then, military and other political priorities have squeezed rich nations’ budgets for climate and development aid.
The facility said in a statement that it expects more pledges ahead of the final replenishment package, which is set for approval at the next GEF Council meeting from May 31 to June 3.
Claude Gascon, interim CEO of the GEF, said that “donor countries have risen to the challenge and made bold commitments towards a more positive future for the planet”. He added that the pledges send a message that “the world is not giving up on nature even in a time of competing priorities”.
Donors under pressure
But Brian O’Donnell, director of the environmental non-profit Campaign for Nature, said the announcement shows “an alarming trend” of donor governments cutting public finance for climate and nature.
“Wealthy nations pledged to increase international nature finance, and yet we are seeing cuts and lower contributions. Investing in nature prevents extinctions and supports livelihoods, security, health, food, clean water and climate,” he said. “Failing to safeguard nature now will result in much larger costs later.”
At COP29 in Baku, developed countries pledged to mobilise $300bn a year in public climate finance by 2035, while at UN biodiversity talks they have also pledged to raise $30bn per year by 2030. Yet several wealthy governments have announced cuts to green finance to increase defense spending, among them most recently the UK.
As for the US, despite Trump’s cuts to international climate finance, Congress approved a $150 million increase in its contribution to the GEF after what was described as the organisation’s “refocus on non-climate priorities like biodiversity, plastics and ocean ecosystems, per US Treasury guidance”.
The facility will only reveal how much each country has pledged when its assembly of 186 member countries meets in early June. The last period’s largest donors were Germany ($575 million), Japan ($451 million), and the US ($425 million).
The GEF has also gone through a change in leadership halfway through its fundraising cycle. Last December, the GEF Council asked former CEO Carlos Manuel Rodriguez to step down effective immediately and appointed Gascon as interim CEO.
Santa Marta conference: fossil fuel transition in an unstable world
New guidelines
As part of the upcoming funding cycle, the GEF has approved a set of guidelines for spending the $3.9bn raised so far, which include allocating 35% of resources for least developed countries and small island states, as well as 20% of the money going to Indigenous people and communities.
Its programs will help countries shift five key systems – nature, food, urban, energy and health – from models that drive degradation to alternatives that protect the planet and support human well-being by integrating the value of nature into production and consumption systems.
The new priorities also include a target to allocate 25% of the GEF’s budget for mobilising private funds through blended finance. This aligns with efforts by wealthy countries to increase contributions from the private sector to international climate finance.
Niels Annen, Germany’s State Secretary for Economic Cooperation and Development, said in a statement that the country’s priorities are “very well reflected” in the GEF’s new spending guidelines, including on “innovative finance for nature and people, better cooperation with the private sector, and stable resources for the most vulnerable countries”.
Aliou Mustafa, of the GEF Indigenous Peoples Advisory Group (IPAG), also welcomed the announcement, adding that “the GEF is strengthening trust and meaningful partnerships with Indigenous Peoples and local communities” by placing them at the “centre of decision-making”.
The post GEF raises $3.9bn ahead of funding deadline, $1bn below previous budget appeared first on Climate Home News.
GEF raises $3.9bn ahead of funding deadline, $1bn below previous budget
Climate Change
Marine heatwaves ‘nearly double’ the economic damage caused by tropical cyclones
Tropical cyclones that rapidly intensify when passing over marine heatwaves can become “supercharged”, increasing the likelihood of high economic losses, a new study finds.
Such storms also have higher rates of rainfall and higher maximum windspeeds, according to the research.
The study, published in Science Advances, looks at the economic damages caused by nearly 800 tropical cyclones that occurred around the world between 1981 and 2023.
It finds that rapidly intensifying tropical cyclones that pass near abnormally warm parts of the ocean produce nearly double – 93% – the economic damages as storms that do not, even when levels of coastal development are taken into account.
One researcher, who was not involved in the study, tells Carbon Brief that the new analysis is a “step forward in understanding how we can better refine our predictions of what might happen in the future” in an increasingly warm world.
As marine heatwaves are projected to become more frequent under future climate change, the authors say that the interactions between storms and these heatwaves “should be given greater consideration in future strategies for climate adaptation and climate preparedness”.
‘Rapid intensification’
Tropical cyclones are rapidly rotating storm systems that form over warm ocean waters, characterised by low pressure at their cores and sustained winds that can reach more than 120 kilometres per hour.
The term “tropical cyclones” encompasses hurricanes, cyclones and typhoons, which are named as such depending on which ocean basin they occur in.
When they make landfall, these storms can cause major damage. They accounted for six of the top 10 disasters between 1900 and 2024 in terms of economic loss, according to the insurance company Aon’s 2025 climate catastrophe insight report.
These economic losses are largely caused by high wind speeds, large amounts of rainfall and damaging storm surges.
Storms can become particularly dangerous through a process called “rapid intensification”.
Rapid intensification is when a storm strengthens considerably in a short period of time. It is defined as an increase in sustained wind speed of at least 30 knots (around 55 kilometres per hour) in a 24-hour period.
There are several factors that can lead to rapid intensification, including warm ocean temperatures, high humidity and low vertical “wind shear” – meaning that the wind speeds higher up in the atmosphere are very similar to the wind speeds near the surface.
Rapid intensification has become more common since the 1980s and is projected to become even more frequent in the future with continued warming. (Although there is uncertainty as to how climate change will impact the frequency of tropical cyclones, the increase in strength and intensification is more clear.)
Marine heatwaves are another type of extreme event that are becoming more frequent due to recent warming. Like their atmospheric counterparts, marine heatwaves are periods of abnormally high ocean temperatures.
Previous research has shown that these marine heatwaves can contribute to a cyclone undergoing rapid intensification. This is because the warm ocean water acts as a “fuel” for a storm, says Dr Hamed Moftakhari, an associate professor of civil engineering at the University of Alabama who was one of the authors of the new study. He explains:
“The entire strength of the tropical cyclone [depends on] how hot the [ocean] surface is. Marine heatwave means we have an abundance of hot water that is like a gas [petrol] station. As you move over that, it’s going to supercharge you.”
However, the authors say, there is no global assessment of how rapid intensification and marine heatwaves interact – or how they contribute to economic damages.
Using the International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship (IBTrACS) – a database of tropical cyclone paths and intensities – the researchers identify 1,600 storms that made landfall during the 1981-2023 period, out of a total of 3,464 events.
Of these 1,600 storms, they were able to match 789 individual, land-falling cyclones with economic loss data from the Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT) and other official sources.
Then, using the IBTrACS storm data and ocean-temperature data from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, the researchers classify each cyclone by whether or not it underwent rapid intensification and if it passed near a recent marine heatwave event before making landfall.
The researchers find that there is a “modest” rise in the number of marine heatwave-influenced tropical cyclones globally since 1981, but with significant regional variations. In particular, they say, there are “clear” upward trends in the north Atlantic Ocean, the north Indian Ocean and the northern hemisphere basin of the eastern Pacific Ocean.
‘Storm characteristics’
The researchers find substantial differences in the characteristics of tropical cyclones that experience rapid intensification and those that do not, as well as between rapidly intensifying storms that occur with marine heatwaves and those that occur without them.
For example, tropical cyclones that do not experience rapid intensification have, on average, maximum wind speeds of around 40 knots (74km/hr), whereas storms that rapidly intensify have an average maximum wind speed of nearly 80 knots (148km/hr).
Of the rapidly intensifying storms, those that are influenced by marine heatwaves maintain higher wind speeds during the days leading up to landfall.
Although the wind speeds are very similar between the two groups once the storms make landfall, the pre-landfall difference still has an impact on a storm’s destructiveness, says Dr Soheil Radfar, a hurricane-hazard modeller at Princeton University. Radfar, who is the lead author of the new study, tells Carbon Brief:
“Hurricane damage starts days before the landfall…Four or five days before a hurricane making landfall, we expect to have high wind speeds and, because of that high wind speed, we expect to have storm surges that impact coastal communities.”
They also find that rapidly intensifying storms have higher peak rainfall than non-rapidly intensifying storms, with marine heatwave-influenced, rapidly intensifying storms exhibiting the highest average rainfall at landfall.
The charts below show the mean sustained wind speed in knots (top) and the mean rainfall in millimetres per hour (bottom) for the tropical cyclones analysed in the study in the five days leading up to and two days following a storm making landfall.
The four lines show storms that: rapidly intensified with the influence of marine heatwaves (red); those that rapidly intensified without marine heatwaves (purple); those that experienced marine heatwaves, but did not rapidly intensify (orange); and those that neither rapidly intensified nor experienced a marine heatwave (blue).

Dr Daneeja Mawren, an ocean and climate consultant at the Mauritius-based Mascarene Environmental Consulting who was not involved in the study, tells Carbon Brief that the new study “helps clarify how marine heatwaves amplify storm characteristics”, such as stronger winds and heavier rainfall. She notes that this “has not been done on a global scale before”.
However, Mawren adds that other factors not considered in the analysis can “make a huge difference” in the rapid intensification of tropical cyclones, including subsurface marine heatwaves and eddies – circular, spinning ocean currents that can trap warm water.
Dr Jonathan Lin, an atmospheric scientist at Cornell University who was also not involved in the study, tells Carbon Brief that, while the intensification found by the study “makes physical sense”, it is inherently limited by the relatively small number of storms that occur. He adds:
“There’s not that many storms, to tease out the physical mechanisms and observational data. So being able to reproduce this kind of work in a physical model would be really important.”
Economic costs
Storm intensity is not the only factor that determines how destructive a given cyclone can be – the economic damages also depend strongly on the population density and the amount of infrastructure development where a storm hits. The study explains:
“A high storm surge in a sparsely populated area may cause less economic damage than a smaller surge in a densely populated, economically important region.”
To account for the differences in development, the researchers use a type of data called “built-up volume”, from the Global Human Settlement Layer. Built-up volume is a quantity derived from satellite data and other high-resolution imagery that combines measurements of building area and average building height in a given area. This can be used as a proxy for the level of development, the authors explain.
By comparing different cyclones that impacted areas with similar built-up volumes, the researchers can analyse how rapid intensification and marine heatwaves contribute to the overall economic damages of a storm.
They find that, even when controlling for levels of coastal development, storms that pass through a marine heatwave during their rapid intensification cause 93% higher economic damages than storms that do not.
They identify 71 marine heatwave-influenced storms that cause more than $1bn (inflation-adjusted across the dataset) in damages, compared to 45 storms that cause those levels of damage without the influence of marine heatwaves.
This quantification of the cyclones’ economic impact is one of the study’s most “important contributions”, says Mawren.
The authors also note that the continued development in coastal regions may increase the likelihood of tropical cyclone damages over time.
Towards forecasting
The study notes that the increased damages caused by marine heatwave-influenced tropical cyclones, along with the projected increases in marine heatwaves, means such storms “should be given greater consideration” in planning for future climate change.
For Radfar and Moftakhari, the new study emphasises the importance of understanding the interactions between extreme events, such as tropical cyclones and marine heatwaves.
Moftakhari notes that extreme events in the future are expected to become both more intense and more complex. This becomes a problem for climate resilience because “we basically design in the future based on what we’ve observed in the past”, he says. This may lead to underestimating potential hazards, he adds.
Mawren agrees, telling Carbon Brief that, in order to “fully capture the intensification potential”, future forecasts and risk assessments must account for marine heatwaves and other ocean phenomena, such as subsurface heat.
Lin adds that the actions needed to reduce storm damages “take on the order of decades to do right”. He tells Carbon Brief:
“All these [planning] decisions have to come by understanding the future uncertainty and so this research is a step forward in understanding how we can better refine our predictions of what might happen in the future.”
The post Marine heatwaves ‘nearly double’ the economic damage caused by tropical cyclones appeared first on Carbon Brief.
Marine heatwaves ‘nearly double’ the economic damage caused by tropical cyclones
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