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This heat wave was the longest and the most intense in Argentina. [1] Climate change is predicted to have significant effects on the living conditions in Argentina. [2]: 30 The climate of Argentina is changing with regards to precipitation patterns and temperatures. The highest increase in the precipitation (from the period 1960–2010) has ...
The typical wildfire season was significantly exacerbated in 2024 by ongoing drought conditions and elevated temperatures caused primarily by anthropogenic climate change. These climate conditions were widely present across several other South American nations such as Brazil and Peru , leading to both of them and other nations also suffering ...
The climate of Argentina varies from region to region, as the vast size of the country and wide variation in altitude make for a wide range of climate types. Summers are the warmest and wettest season in most of Argentina , except for most of Patagonia , where it is the driest season.
The process of climate change has produced abundant rains and high temperatures, (a phenomenon called tropicalization) favouring the reproduction of the mosquito that transmits the dengue virus, advancing the epidemic this year by several weeks compared to previous seasons, which historically, Infection peaks tended to occur between March and April, suggesting a continued increase in cases. [11]
Hydration station in Buenos Aires. On January 10, the temperatures were "particularly anomalous" in the south of the Pampas region and the north of Patagonia. [9] According to the Servicio Meteorológico Nacional (SMN), that day maximum temperature records were broken in Tres Arroyos 40.7 °C (105.3 °F) and Coronel Pringles 39.6 °C (103.3 °F), along with other records that ranged between 40 ...
Because the first International March for the Climate Crisis was held on March 15, 2019, Becker, Bruno Rodriguez, and their other three friends decided to find Jóvenes por el Clima, a part of Youth Climate, by the end of February 2019. They decided to arrange the march in Argentina, joined by 5,000 people after founding the organization.
Bruno Rodriguez is an Argentine climate activist. He is leader of the Fridays for Future Movement in Argentina. [1] [2] [3]He was a delegate at the 2019 United Nations Youth Climate Summit.
The parties discussed the progress made since the first United Nations Climate Change Conference ten years ago and its future challenges, with special emphasis on climate change mitigation and adaptation. To promote developing countries better adapt to climate change, the Buenos Aires Plan of Action [1] was adopted. The parties also began ...