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  • 2 days ago
Data from NASA satellites, as assessed by national climate experts, indicates that the Gulf of Mexico is experiencing its highest recorded sea surface temperatures for June in over half a century. This alarming discovery has led to urgent alerts regarding the potential for devastating hurricanes and the risk of coral mortality that threatens U.S. fisheries. The unusual warming of the Gulf is attributed to the shift from La Niña to El Niño conditions, compounded by several years of accumulated ocean heat. NASA researchers caution that this record-high temperature poses a significant risk to U.S. infrastructure, energy facilities, and coastal regions in Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida, enhancing the likelihood of rapid storm intensification to near-record levels.

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00:00NASA satellite data just confirmed what climate scientists feared most this hurricane season.
00:05The Gulf of Mexico is running at its hottest June sea surface temperatures in over 50 years.
00:11And federal scientists are issuing a direct threat warning to five U.S. states.
00:16This is not a distant climate projection.
00:18This is a measurement from space, confirmed by government data,
00:22showing record warm water sitting right beneath the most hurricane-vulnerable coastline in America.
00:28NASA scientists warn the combination of unprecedented Gulf heat,
00:33reduced wind shear from the El Nino transition,
00:36and high atmospheric moisture creates a perfect rapid intensification engine.
00:41A storm passing over this water could go from nothing to catastrophic in under 24 hours.
00:47Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida are all in the direct threat zone.
00:52The Gulf hasn't been this dangerous for June in half a century.
00:56And hurricane season is just beginning.
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