The China Heatwave and the New Normal
Unexpected Elements
BBC
4.4 • 568 Ratings
🗓️ 4 September 2022
⏱️ 56 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Hot on the tail of China’s heatwave comes the other side of the extreme coin – tragic flooding. Also, a coming global shortage of sulfur, while scientists produce useful oxygen on Mars in the MOXIE experiment.
Prof Chunzai Wang is the Director of the State Key Laboratory of Tropical Oceanography in Guangzhou, China. He tells Roland about the surprising nature of the extreme temperatures and droughts much of China has been experiencing, and how they are connected to so many of the record-breaking weather events around the northern hemisphere this summer, including the tragic flooding in Pakistan.
Some people of course saw this coming. Richard Betts of the UK Met Office talks of a paper by one of his predecessors published 50 years ago exactly that pretty much predicted the greenhouse gas-induced climate change more or less exactly.
Clearly, the world needs to cut carbon emissions, and oil and coal would be sensible places to start. But as Prof Mark Maslin points out, this will come with its own consequences in terms of pressure on the industrial supply of sulfur and sulfuric acid, essential to so many other devices and processes. Can a shortage be averted?
And scientists working on Nasa’s Mars Perseverance team report more results this week. Alongside all the sensitive instrumentation aboard, an experiment known as MOXIE was somehow squeezed in to demonstrate the principle of electrolyzing Martian carbon dioxide to produce usable oxygen gas. As Michael Hecht explains, the tech is scalable and would be more or less essential to any viable human trip to Mars in the future.
(Image: The Jialing River bed at the confluence with the Yangtze River is exposed due to drought in August 2022 in Chongqing, China. The water level of the Jialing River, one of the tributaries of the Yangtze River, has dropped due to high temperature and drought. Credit: Zhong Guilin/VCG via Getty Images)
Presenter: Roland Pease Assistant Producer: Robbie Wojciechowski Producer: Alex Mansfield
Transcript
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| 0:29.5 | Listen first on BBC Sounds. Thank you for downloading the Science Hour from the BBC World Service |
| 0:35.2 | with me, Roland Peas. In half an hour, the vexed question |
| 0:38.4 | of what honeybees get up to over winter. They form this lovely winter cluster, which is kind of like |
| 0:43.8 | a ball of bees in the centre of the hive. And the queen's in there. And they kind of like drop the |
| 0:48.6 | clutch. So you can see some of them doing it now. They can flap their wings and fly. Or they can |
| 0:53.7 | idle. Yeah, they can idle their wings and fly, or they can... Iddle. |
| 0:54.7 | Yeah, they can idle their wings, basically. |
| 0:56.5 | They can keep their wing muscles vibrating and that produces heat. |
| 0:59.4 | Just one strategy for insects to survive. |
| 1:02.2 | The Cold of Winter. |
| 1:03.5 | The topic for crowd science later in the podcast. |
| 1:06.1 | Before that on Science and Action, it's the extraordinary extraordinary multiple record-breaking heat wave and drought |
| 1:12.8 | just ending in China that's our first concern. But also reasons to be grateful for sulfur |
| 1:18.5 | and we've even a scientist who's grateful for atmospheric carbon dioxide if the atmosphere is |
| 1:24.8 | Mars is to everyone's advantage, it's to the advantage of human exploration. |
| 1:29.9 | It's, of course, to the advantage of the further development of space technology, and it's |
... |
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