China and US-Mexico Border Experienced Record Dust Storms in 2025: WMO

"GENEVA - Record-breaking sand and dust storms battered parts of China and the U.S.-Mexico border ​region during 2025, disrupting transport, damaging health and ‌the environment, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said in a new report on Friday.
In April 2025, dust sweeping from Mongolia triggered China's ​worst sand and dust storm in a decade, ​measured by intensity, duration and geographical reach, the ⁠report found.

Along the U.S.-Mexico border, dust storms were unusually ​frequent and intense. El Paso, Texas, recorded 50 dust-weather days ​in 2025, more than double the annual average and the highest number since the "Dust Bowl" disaster of the 1930s, the WMO ​report said.

The world's highest average dust levels remained centred ​on the Bodélé Depression in Chad, one of the planet's most active ‌regions ⁠of dust.

Around 2 billion tons of dust enter the atmosphere each year, much of it originating in major desert regions including the Sahara, the Gobi and the ​Arabian Desert."

Olivia Le Poidevin reports for Reuters July 10, 2026.

Source: Reuters, 07/10/2026