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RT @WMO: ⛰️In 2023, #glaciers worldwide suffered the largest mass loss recorded in over 50 years.

This is the second consecutive year in which all glaciated regions on the planet experienced ice loss.

This is a global wake-up call. This is the #StateOfWater.πŸ’§

πŸ”—https://t.co/hvS4bzxqNo https://t.co/Yx8GJyKvlR

ECMWF

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RT @esaclimate: The @WMO State of the global water report is out πŸ‘‡

R&D from the @ESA Climate Change Initiative is developing multidecadal satellite records for snow glaciers, soil moisture (and others) to understand the hydrological cycle.

We are even developing a proof-of-concept to develop records of River Discharge across contintents using space-derived data.

Our data - https://t.co/gaEIxPIHRf
Our projects - https://t.co/cylgS0NnIh

🚰2023 was the driest year for global rivers in 33 years

πŸ”οΈGlaciers suffered the largest mass loss in 50 years

🌊The hydrological cycle is becoming more erratic, floods more extreme & droughts more intense

This is the #StateOfWater.

Full report: https://t.co/Z5TaiSWmnf https://t.co/9NZSAzFnwV
- World Meteorological Organization

ESA Earth Observation

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The hydrological cycle is becoming increasingly more erratic. About three out of four natural hazards worldwide are water-related.

WMO calls for better monitoring and data sharing. Hydrological information supports #EarlyWarningsForAll.

#StateOfWaterπŸ”—https://t.co/DtgJoHhtnK https://t.co/swoAVHhuPj

World Meteorological Organization

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RT @WMO: The hydrological cycle is becoming increasingly more erratic. About three out of four natural hazards worldwide are water-related.

WMO calls for better monitoring and data sharing. Hydrological information supports #EarlyWarningsForAll.

#StateOfWaterπŸ”—https://t.co/DtgJoHhtnK https://t.co/swoAVHhuPj

ECMWF

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Climate change is making the hydrological cycle more erratic.
As a result, 🌊 floods are becoming more severe and 🌡 droughts more intense.

This is the #StateOfWater.

Read the full report πŸ”— https://t.co/DtgJoHhtnK

World Meteorological Organization

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πŸ’§ 2023 was the driest year for global rivers in over three decades

🌑️ 2023 was also recorded as the hottest year on record

We need better monitoring & data sharing. We need #EarlyWarningsforAll to tackle water-related hazards.

πŸ”—https://t.co/DtgJoHhtnK

#StateOfWater https://t.co/dV4jRjvnyu

World Meteorological Organization

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RT @WMO: πŸ’§ 2023 was the driest year for global rivers in over three decades

🌑️ 2023 was also recorded as the hottest year on record

We need better monitoring & data sharing. We need #EarlyWarningsforAll to tackle water-related hazards.

πŸ”—https://t.co/DtgJoHhtnK

#StateOfWater https://t.co/dV4jRjvnyu

EUMETSAT

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🧊As the latest #StateOfWater report highlighted at #COP29, glaciers worldwide respond differently to climate change, but collectively, they lost over 600 gigatons of water in 2023.

πŸ”—Details: https://t.co/MUmPSNtXGB https://t.co/vVk3RPw8jq

World Meteorological Organization

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🧊As the latest #StateOfWater report highlighted at #COP29, glaciers worldwide respond differently to climate change, but collectively, they lost over 600 gigatons of water in 2023.

πŸ”—Details: https://t.co/MvdBFU1zgq

via @WMO https://t.co/ObAPOVfCPZ

UN Biodiversity

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#EnergyForAll requires integrating the latest #StateOfClimate and #StateOfWater insights, as weather, water, and climate services are critical for energy security and advancing clean energy solutions.

πŸ”—https://t.co/YdcVYzwi8h https://t.co/HPd0nQAdTO

World Meteorological Organization

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Just Launched πŸ“’ The WMO’s 2024 State of Global Water Resources Report is now available!

In 2024, the water cycle has become increasingly erratic and extreme, swinging between deluge and drought.

This is the #StateOfWater.

Read the report πŸ”— https://t.co/txWj2g9NiA https://t.co/ApS8yluvmZ

World Meteorological Organization

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How much water is too little, or too much?

In the past six years, two-thirds of rivers worldwide had too much or too little water, showing just how unpredictable and erratic the hydrological cycle has become.

This is the #StateOfWater.

Read the report πŸ”—https://t.co/txWj2g9NiA https://t.co/OiRng2J720

World Meteorological Organization

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2024 marked the sixth consecutive year of an erratic hydrological cycle.

Continued investment in water resources monitoring and stronger collaboration in data sharing are vital to closing global monitoring gaps.

Read the #StateOfWater Report πŸ”— https://t.co/txWj2g9NiA https://t.co/KDVXvR1IMF

World Meteorological Organization

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In 2024, all glaciated regions on Earth lost ice for the third consecutive year.
That’s 450 Gt gone: enough to fill 180 million Olympic swimming pools.
This added 1.2 mm to global sea levels.

Read the #StateOfWater report πŸ”— https://t.co/txWj2g9NiA https://t.co/AJzXoeRuV7

World Meteorological Organization

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🌑️ 2024 was the hottest year on record.

Overall, 2024 was dry and hot, but regional patterns revealed a stark contrast: some regions endured severe drought, while others faced multiple devastating floods.

Read the #StateOfWater report πŸ”— https://t.co/txWj2g9NiA https://t.co/gXDPz5Rn4E

World Meteorological Organization

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Five facts about the WMO’s 2024 State of Global Water Resources Report:

This is the #StateOfWater.

Read the full report πŸ”— https://t.co/txWj2g9NiA https://t.co/fnlCNCj7JF

World Meteorological Organization

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