Dust in the wind: intense storms struck China, US in 2025, says UN

A dust storm on the Greek island of Crete in April 2026 -  the WMO is calling for stronger sharing of sand storm data
A dust storm on the Greek island of Crete in April 2026 - the WMO is calling for stronger sharing of sand storm data.

China and the southern United States were hit last year by some of their worst sand and dust storms in decades, the United Nations said Friday.

The U.N.'s weather and climate agency said the episodes affected public health and the environment and disrupted economic activity.

The World Meteorological Organization said that every year, around 2 billion tonnes of dust enters the atmosphere and can travel for thousands of kilometers across continents and oceans.

The main dust sources are major deserts such as the Sahara in Africa, the Gobi in Asia and the Arabian Desert in the Middle East.

Though it is a natural process, poor water and land management, drought and environmental degradation "are increasingly to blame," the WMO said.

"Sand and dust storms affect air quality and human health," WMO chief Celeste Saulo said in a statement.

"They reduce agricultural productivity, disrupt transport and aviation, strain water and energy systems, and damage ecosystems. No country is immune to their impacts."

Vehicles crossing the Republic Bridge over the Tigris River in Baghdad during a dust storm in May 2026
Vehicles crossing the Republic Bridge over the Tigris River in Baghdad during a dust storm in May 2026.

In its 10th annual Airborne Dust Bulletin, the WMO said that globally, overall average dust concentrations last year were 12.1 micrograms per cubic meter of air—slightly down from 12.5 in 2024—though with big regional variations.

The highest annual mean dust concentrations worldwide were again in the Bodele Depression in Chad, one of the planet's most active dust source regions, at around 800–1,100 micrograms.

Texas takes a hit

The desert border region of Mexico and the United States saw exceptionally frequent, intense and prolonged dust storms in 2025.

The number of dust storms, 12, was the highest since 1935, when the United States was in the midst of its "Dust Bowl" disaster, the WMO said.

El Paso, Texas, experienced 50 days with dust weather—more than double the annual average.

The problem peaked on March 18, with a daily average PM10 particle concentration of 2,064 micrograms per cubic meter of air.

PM10 is particulate matter with a diameter of 10 micrometers.

The highest hourly peak hit 8,142 micrograms—the highest measured in Texas since hourly PM monitoring began around 27 years ago.

A shepherd walking with his flock during a sandstorm sweeping through northeastern Syria in May 2025
A shepherd walking with his flock during a sandstorm sweeping through northeastern Syria in May 2025.

The World Health Organization's recommended air quality guideline for the average annual PM10 level is 15 micrograms, or 45 micrograms in a 24-hour period.

"The season in the United States was really extreme," Sara Basart, scientific officer at the WMO's Global Atmosphere Watch, told reporters.

The impact on breathing and visibility, and the sand "scratching your eyes or your skin," means the recommendation is "you have to stay at home" during such events, she said.

AI prediction potential

In April 2025, China suffered its worst dust and sand storm in a decade in terms of intensity, duration and influence.

As dust swept in from Mongolia, hourly PM10 concentrations reached 3,000–4,000 micrograms in some places.

North Africa and the Middle East also suffered a series of major dust storms between March and May 2025.

Parts of Iraq and Kuwait saw greater dust activity than the year before, as did central Asia.

Saulo said that because sand and dust storms cross borders, countries needed to share early warning data.

The agency said artificial intelligence had the potential to improve sand and dust forecasts, but more research was needed at this stage.

Currently, some AI systems are better at forecasting short-lived, rapidly developing local dust storms, while others are more consistent with large-scale events that develop and travel over several days.

Who's behind this story?

Andrew Zinin

Andrew Zinin

Master's in physics with research experience. Long-time science news enthusiast. Plays key role in Science X's editorial success. Full profile →

© 2026 AFP

Citation: Dust in the wind: intense storms struck China, US in 2025, says UN (2026, July 10) retrieved 11 July 2026 from https://phys.org/news/2026-07-intense-storms-struck-china.html

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