Last month saw a spike in temperature in Irish waters. An “unheard of” marine heatwave – defined as a period of persistent anomalously warm ocean temperatures, which can disrupt ecosystems – raised sea temperatures by four to five degrees.
The marine heatwave in our North Atlantic waters is classified as “extreme” by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - and man-made climate change is at least partially to blame.
Hotter seas have already brought previously unknown species to our shores - and driven away the fish that our fishing industry relies on. And that can only get worse if seas continue to heat.
On today’s In the News podcast, environmentalist and activist Saoirse McHugh explains why warming seas is a crisis that needs to be addressed urgently.
Ceasefire comes into effect in Gaza after Hamas hands Israel list of hostages for release
Hannah Leonard defies expectations after horrific Sicily incident: Doctors kept saying ‘it is very, very bad’
TikTok pulls service in US as Apple and Google remove platform from app stores
Sally Rooney takes climate fight to Mayo County Council by objecting to ‘toxic’ data centre plan
And Kevin Flannery, marine biologist and founder of the Dingle Oceanworld aquarium, talks about the new species now coming into Irish waters and the severe challenges ahead for our native marine species and for the coastal communities who rely on them.
Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by John Casey.