
Delger Erdenesanaa
Ocean Reporting Network Fellow at Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
environmental journalist @Ocean_ORN | https://t.co/m1bpH5wKzt
Articles
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1 month ago |
thestar.com.my | Delger Erdenesanaa
WITH the addition of 2024, yet another record-hot year, the past 10 years have been the 10 hottest in nearly 200 years of record- keeping, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) reports. “That’s never happened before,” said Chris Hewitt, climate services division director. It marks the first time since record keeping began that all of the 10 hottest years have fallen within the most recent decade.
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1 month ago |
businessandamerica.com | Delger Erdenesanaa
With the addition of 2024, yet another record-hot year, the past 10 years have been the 10 hottest in nearly 200 years of record-keeping, the World Meteorological Organization reports. “That’s never happened before,” said Chris Hewitt, the director of the W.M.O.’s climate services division. It marks the first time since record keeping began that all of the 10 hottest years have fallen within the most recent decade.
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1 month ago |
nytimes.com | Delger Erdenesanaa
The oceans have so far absorbed around 90 percent of the additional heat trapped inside Earth's atmosphere by greenhouse gases. The oceans' heat content - a way to measure this warmth throughout different depths - also reached a record high last year. Over the past two decades, from 2005 to 2024, the oceans warmed more than twice as fast as they did from 1960 to 2005, according to the report. Increased ocean temperatures have had devastating consequences for marine life.
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1 month ago |
thestar.com.my | Delger Erdenesanaa
HUMANS live in a plankton world. These minuscule organisms blanket the oceans, covering nearly three-quarters of the planet, and are among the most abundant forms of life on Earth. But as the world warms, plankton populations are shifting, with consequences that ripple through the entire marine food chain.
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1 month ago |
telegraphindia.com | Delger Erdenesanaa
Delger Erdenesanaa A year ago, Nasa launched a satellite that provided the most detailed view yet of the diversity and distribution of phytoplankton. Its insights should help scientists understand the changing dynamics of life in the ocean Delger Erdenesanaa Published 17.03.25, 06:11 AM Zooplankton under a microscope. NYTNS/Billy Hickey Humans are living in a plankton world.
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🚨 Announcing the 2024 cohort of @pulitzercenter ORN. 10 Fellows from 8 countries will spend a year investigating deep-sea mining, marine geoengineering, pollution, IUU fishing, and other ocean issues all over the globe. Meet the journalists 🧵👇 https://t.co/0BgN1h5xAo https://t.co/YRatcCeqjs

RT @dionnesearcey: We asked all 50 states about their groundwater rules. Their answers reveal dizzying laws full of gaps that make it even…

Looking to talk to people who have personal experiences with extreme weather and disasters for a @nytclimate story -- especially in California! Feel free to DM me.