Atmospheric river storms are getting stronger, and deadlier. The race to understand them is on – the Guardian

As the climate crisis supercharges storms over the Pacific, scientists are creating tools that can measure them from the inside..
The Marshall Islands Aren’t Giving In to Sea Level Rise – Hakai Magazine

The precariously placed island nation has put together a comprehensive—if expensive—plan to survive sea level rise…
Six Spongy Sea Creatures Suggest Warming Might Be Worse Than Thought – the New York Times

Research on a long-lived but rarely seen species in the Caribbean is helping scientists piece together a revised history of climate change…
Category 6-level hurricanes are already here, a new study says – Grist Magazine

In the real world, Category 5 is synonymous with the biggest and baddest storms. But some U.S. scientists are making the case that it no longer captures the intensity of recent hurricanes. A paper published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences lays out a framework for extending the current hurricane-rating system…with a new category for storms that have winds topping 192 miles per hour. According to the study, the world has already seen storms that would qualify as Category 6s…
Here’s How the Next Two Atmospheric Rivers Will Affect California – the New York Times

A “Pineapple Express” hitting California through Thursday will set the stage for another week of unsettled weather across the state…
Prepare for a ‘Gray Swan’ Climate – the Atlantic

The next climate extremes are both predictable and unprecedented, and they’re coming on fast…
Record-setting storm wallops East Coast with flooding, high winds – the Washington Post

A historically intense December coastal storm is blasting the Northeast on Monday after unleashing heavy rainfall, coastal flooding and high winds from Florida to the Mid-Atlantic. More than 700,000 customers had no power midday Monday as gusts surpassed 60 mph in many locations in eastern New England…
Can the tourism industry survive the climate crisis? – the Guardian

From the Solomon Islands to Denali national park, how five communities reliant on tourism are coping as climate change upends their industry…One of the terrible ironies of the climate crisis is that some of the most beautiful – and popular – places in the world are also the most vulnerable. Which means as temperatures rise, extreme weather events increase, water sources dry up and natural habitats die, these places are facing another devastating loss: tourists…
Earth on verge of five catastrophic climate tipping points, scientists warn – the Guardian

Humanity faces ‘devastating domino effects’ including mass displacement and financial ruin as planet warms…“Tipping points in the Earth system pose threats of a magnitude never faced by humanity,” said Tim Lenton, from the University of Exeter’s Global Systems Institute. “They can trigger devastating domino effects, including the loss of whole ecosystems and capacity to grow staple crops, with societal impacts including mass displacement, political instability and financial collapse…”