NASA suggests natural disasters will continue to intensify with climate change | Credits: Shutterstock
The latest data from NASA leaves us in no doubt. The climate is growing more wild, more dramatic — a new era of chaos is upon us — and we’re seeing it in real time. Across the globe, floods, wildfires, hurricane-force winds, and record-breaking temperatures are occurring with greater frequency — much greater — and with greater intensity, according to a report published Tuesday by The Guardian.
The US space agency’s study shows that such extreme events are becoming more frequent, longer-lasting, and more severe, with last year’s figures reaching twice the average of 2003-2020.
“A UK Met Office expert said increases in extremes have long been predicted but are now being seen in reality. He warned that people were unprepared for such weather events, which would be outside previous experience,” The Guardian wrote.
According to the space agency, climate-related disasters have jumped by nearly 50 per cent over the past two decades. The number of catastrophic events that cause death, destroy homes, undermine food chains and displace entire communities is up — and there’s no turning back.
Sounding the climate chaos alarm
Scientists are sounding the alarm. Natural disasters are expected to worsen. This isn’t just about climate change; it’s about climate chaos. The data shows that the most severe events — the kind that used to be called “one-in-a-century” — are now becoming standard.
Heatwaves last much longer, floods arrive faster and cause more damage, wildfires consume larger swaths of land, and hurricane winds become more severe. All this signals a dramatic escalation — a transformation of our climate into something increasingly unstable and less manageable.
Some might say we’re used to catastrophic headlines by now. We see wildfires in Greece, floods in Belgium, and hurricane destruction in Florida.
We view them through our phone screens, through social media — a kind of numbing feed. But this new data shows something else. We’re not just experiencing the worst events more frequently; we’re seeing them become much more severe. The impacts today are greater — the human and financial cost, adding up to an alarming new reality.
Direct result of human activity
Scientists say this is a direct result of human activity — from the way we produce energy, grow food, destroy forests and consume resources.
“We are seeing more and more extreme events around the world, so this is certainly alarming,” Dr Bailing Li, from the Hydrological Sciences Laboratory of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Centre – affiliated with the University of Maryland’s Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Centre, told the Guardian.
Dr. Li said more data is required. “It’s difficult to pinpoint exactly what’s happening here, but other events suggest that (global) warming is the driving factor.”
The atmospheric warming we’re experiencing drives more water into clouds, strengthens hurricane formations and contributes to catastrophic downpours. Rising temperatures enable wildfires to grow more rapidly, spreading further chaos. This is not a distant threat — it’s something we’re already grappling with today.
The vulnerable suffer the worst
While policymakers talk, the climate isn’t waiting. Cities are forced to evacuate, farmers lose their harvests, tourists are stranded, insurers pay out record settlements, small islands see their shores washing away, and vulnerable communities suffer the worst.
The rich may find refuge — a fortified basement, a move to a new city — but the poor pay the price; the vulnerable pay with their homes, their health, and their lives.
Some say we’re destined for chaos — that there’s little we can do to ease the trajectory. But many climate experts insist we still have a choice. We can reduce emissions, protect forests, generate clean energy, and rethink our consumption habits.
‘It’s certainly scary’
Dr Matthew Rodell, chief of hydrologic sciences at Goddard, says the problem now is that “the world isn’t prepared for the changes in intense rainfall and drought that are now occurring.”
“All around the world, people have built their ways of living around the weather that they and their forebears were used to, which leaves them vulnerable to more frequent and severe extremes that are outside our experience,” he added.
“It’s certainly scary,” Dr Matthew Rodell, chief of hydrologic sciences at Goddard, concluded.


