Climate change

Florida I

Florida I

I'm fascinated by Florida because it's both obvious - balmy weather and beachside condos - and hard to place. Three visits in, what I'm seeing is that Florida's story is one of man conquering and transforming a very unique natural environment.

Yet driving back from Key West to Miami you follow the broken remains of the Great Florida Overseas Railroad - an emblem, perhaps, of that conquest not being forever...

El Niño and climate change

El Niño and climate change

This entry was published on the World Bank Voices blog in November 2015 as What El Niño teaches us about climate resilience.

It was recorded by the Spanish conquistadors, and triggered famines that have been linked to China’s 1901 Boxer Rebellion and even the French revolution.

Named by Peruvian fishermen because of its tendency to appear around Christmastime, El Niño is the planet’s most large-scale and recurring mode of climate variability. Every 2-7 years, a slackening of trade winds that push sun-warmed water across the Pacific contributes to a rise in water temperature across large parts of the ocean. As the heat rises, a global pattern of weather changes ensues, triggering heat waves in many tropical regions and extreme drought or rainfall in others.