Collection 

Dust Hazards in a Changing Climate

Submission status
Open
Submission deadline

Dust hazards—including dust storms, sandstorms, long-range dust transport, volcanic ash-related dust, and saline dust events—are becoming increasingly prominent under climate change, land degradation, and intensifying drought. These hazards not only reduce visibility and threaten transportation and infrastructure, but also affect air quality, public health, agriculture, ecosystems, and regional climate processes. In many arid and semi-arid regions, dust generation is strongly linked to extreme weather, surface instability, vegetation decline, and soil drying. As dust storms become more frequent and severe, and transboundary dust transport gains global attention, improving our understanding of dust sources, triggering mechanisms, transport dynamics, and multi-hazard impacts is essential for advancing prediction and resilience.

This Collection aims to highlight interdisciplinary research that advances the observation, modeling, impact assessment, and risk reduction of dust-related natural hazards. Contributions addressing both natural and climate-enhanced drivers of dust hazards are welcome.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

  • Physical processes and triggering mechanisms of dust storms and sandstorms
  • Remote sensing and multi-sensor detection of dust generation, transport, and deposition
  • Impacts of dust hazards on air quality, transportation safety, agriculture, and public health
  • Climate–dust interactions, drought-driven dust hazards, and land degradation feedbacks
  • Transboundary dust transport and regional-to-global atmospheric effects
  • Modeling dust emission, dispersion, and long-range transport
  • Dust impacts on cascading hazards, such as post-fire dust events or dryland eco-instability
  • Integrated approaches for forecasting, early warning, and risk mitigation
  • Case studies from major dust-prone regions worldwide
Submit manuscript
Manuscript editing services
Dust Hazards in a Changing Climate

Editors

  • Chong Xu, PhD

    National Institute of Natural Hazards, Beijing, China

The Collection will publish original research papers, and articles in various formats (full details on content types can be found here). Papers will be published in npj Natural Hazards as soon as they are accepted and then collected together and promoted on the Collection homepage. All Collections are associated with a call for papers and are managed by one or more of our Editorial Board Members and/or Guest Editor.

This Collection welcomes submissions from all authors – and not by invitation only – on the condition that the manuscripts fall within the scope of the Collection and of npj Natural Hazards more generally. See our editorial process page for more details.

All submissions are subject to the same peer review process and editorial standards as regular npj Natural Hazards articles, including the journal’s policy on competing interests. The Guest Editor declares no competing interests with the submissions which they have handled through the peer review process. The peer review of any submissions for which the Guest Editor has competing interests is handled by another Editorial Board Member who has no competing interests. For more information, refer to our Collections guidelines.

This Collection is not supported by sponsorship.