Over the past few weeks a slow-moving weather event has led to record high temperatures across North America.
This kind of event is known as a heat dome, and it’s breaking existing models that try to predict the weather.
Today, journalist for The Saturday Paper Max Opray on why this particular heat even is alarming climate scientists, and what it means for the next Australian summer.
Stay in touch with us on Twitter and Instagram
Guest: Journalist for The Saturday Paper, Max Opray.
Background reading: Welcome to the heat dome in The Saturday Paper
See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Great Housing Disaster: Who’s to blame?
Penny Wong’s plan to recognise Palestine
Mark Zuckerberg is playing chicken with Australian news
Does the Immigration minister really believe in what he's doing?
The Lehrmann interview (Taylor's version)
The fossil fuel approval that wasn’t published
Sophie Cunningham on remembering Georgia Blain
The killing of Zomi Frankcom
Can a gag order slow down Donald Trump?
Why the churches lobby is still so powerful in Canberra
Australia is exporting right wing media to the UK
Read This: Friends, Mary Beard Fans, Countrymen, Lend Me Your Ears
Read This: No Dogs Die in Briohny Doyle's New Novel
What to know about the biggest Covid wave since Omicron
Labor’s ‘shameful’ last-minute immigration bill
Using psychotropic drugs to treat children
Anjali Sharma on lobbying parliament from her dorm room
The Weekend Read: Elmo Keep on the insane spectacle of U2 at the Las Vegas sphere
Dutton and Albanese share a flight and talk God
The ‘beige’ man behind Australia’s nuclear plan
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
ABC News Daily
The Daily
Morning Wire
Up First from NPR
Dobré ráno | Denný podcast denníka SME