Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Climate Change Might Make It Harder to Find Submarines

Financial Express Pune

|

June 15, 2025

Warm water due to climate change likely to affect how sound behaves to detect submarines

- JACOB JUDAH

Submarines are among the most advanced and deadly weapons systems in the world. Armed with torpedoes, cruise missiles, and sometimes intercontinental ballistic missiles, they're capable of operating deep below the surface for months at a time and are notoriously hard to detect.

Now, their ability to hide in the vast oceans may be getting a boost from an unlikely source: climate change.

The waters where many submarines lurk have been quickly warming, as humans pump out greenhouse gases and oceans absorb the excess heat that gets trapped in the atmosphere. And that warming, according to a recent paper produced by the NATO Defense College in Rome, can have a powerful effect on how sound, the primary means of detecting submarines, behaves underwater.

It could make large areas of the oceans impenetrable to submarine hunters. "We observed, in most areas that we looked at, a reduction in the range of detection," said Mauro Gilli, a researcher who studies military technology. His team modeled the way sound waves moved through the depths from 1970 to 1999. And they compared it with the way current climate modeling predicts they will move between 2070 and 2099. There were significant differences. The researchers found that in the North Atlantic, where Russian submarines play cat and mouse with NATO forces, the distances at which they can be heard will shrink significantly. This could be by almost half in the Bay of Biscay, off the coasts of France and Spain.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Financial Express Pune

Financial Express Pune

Zomato’s gig economy lives in the grey

Why the debate over the delivery workers' strike misses the limits of absolutes on labour and capital

time to read

3 mins

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Call on Mustafizur’s ouster from IPL taken at top level in BCCI

THE DECISION TO instruct IPL franchise Kolkata Knight Riders to release Bangladesh pacer Mustafizur Rahman from its squad wasn’t the outcome of discussions among members of the Indian cricket board — the league’s governing council wasn't consulted, either.

time to read

1 mins

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Dabur may see mid-single digit sales growth in Q3

DABUR INDIA ON Monday announced that it expects its consolidated revenue for Q3FY26 to increase by a mid-single digit percentage, while both its operating profit and profit after tax are expected to grow at a faster rate than revenue.

time to read

1 min

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

RBI eases related-party lending guidelines

· Non-compliant transactions to continue till maturity

time to read

1 mins

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Further tariff hike by US on India may hit exports

PUNITIVE LEVY

time to read

1 mins

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

India’s hits & misses in 2025

PRAGMATISM LARGELY DEFINED INDIA'S OUTREACH IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD IN 2025

time to read

4 mins

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Experts see conservative tax targets for next fiscal

REALISTIC YET CAUTIOUS

time to read

2 mins

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

IDBI Bank sale may spill over to next financial year

Non-debt capital receipts may face a shortfall

time to read

1 min

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

ITC: Product mix may weaken

STEEP TAX HIKE MAY DRIVE VOLUMES TOWARDS ILLICIT CIGARETTE BRANDS

time to read

1 mins

January 06, 2026

Financial Express Pune

Trai slaps fine of ₹150 cr on telcos over spam calls

THE TELECOM REGULATORY Authority of India (Trai) has imposed a penalty of ₹150 crore on telecom operators for their failure to curb spam calls and messages, according to an official source.

time to read

1 min

January 06, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size