Live Intelligence
Live world map for tracking conflicts, disasters, and global flashpoints
This is the broad entry point into The World Now’s live event intelligence layer. Follow the most active hotspots, see where new incidents are clustering, and move into deeper conflict, disaster, and market-specific pages from one surface.
Live surface
Live global event surface
Click any hotspot to inspect the event. This page is optimized for broad world-map intent, while the full globe keeps the immersive product experience.
Top live events now
The newest and highest-severity events across the world intelligence layer.
| Event | Type | Severity |
|---|---|---|
🛩️ Military: BFRT02 Military BFRT02 (BEECHCRAFT Super King Air 350) at 24,000ft, 312kts. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: CNV7862 Military CNV7862 (Boeing C-40A Clipper) at 11,925ft, 376kts. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: 4704 over South China Sea Military 4704 (LOCKHEED C-130 Hercules) at 20,025ft, 295kts in South China Sea. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: UAF1217 over Persian Gulf Military UAF1217 (LOCKHEED C-130 Hercules) at 11,725ft, 252kts in Persian Gulf. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: LHOB265 Military LHOB265 (Boeing C-17A Globemaster III) at 32,000ft, 415kts. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: CHLE1D Military CHLE1D (Pilatus PC-21) at 10,000ft, 198kts. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: CHLE1L Military CHLE1L (PILATUS PC-21) at 11,825ft, 271kts. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: SUBPE Military SUBPE (GULFSTREAM 4) at 26,000ft, 396kts. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: RCH221 Military RCH221 (Boeing C-17A Globemaster III) at 36,000ft, 454kts. | Aircraft | HIGH |
🛩️ Military: RCH985 over Ukraine/Black Sea Military RCH985 (Boeing C-17A Globemaster III) at 29,350ft, Unknown speed in Ukraine/Black Sea. | Aircraft | CRITICAL |
Global Risk Index
|conflict and macro are driving the current global risk posture.
Catalyst impact
Market-moving highlights
Middle East Drone Strikes Disrupt Cyprus Tourism Economy
Drone strikes linked to the Middle East war are disrupting tourism in Cyprus, prompting over 30% of visitors to leave. This upheaval is severely shaking the local economy and highlighting risks in the tourism sector.
EU Toughens Russia Sanctions Amid Defense Alliance Shift
The EU is preparing its 21st sanctions package against Russia, including energy restrictions, as described by the Estonian foreign minister. Meanwhile, the EU is adopting a mutual assistance clause to position itself as a defense alliance amid NATO uncertainties.
US Troop Withdrawal from Germany Amid Iran Tensions
The US plans to withdraw 5,000 troops from Germany due to disputes with Chancellor Merz over Iran policies. This could strain NATO alliances and prompt Europe to enhance its own defense capabilities, impacting global security and economic stability.
US Ends Iran Hostilities Amid Rising Middle East Tensions
Donald Trump declared the end of US-Iran hostilities, marking a shift in foreign policy. However, military sales and rejected proposals signal ongoing risks to global security and markets.
Japan Crash Injures 13 Students, Spotlights Road Safety Risks
A head-on crash in western Japan injured 13 people, including junior high students, raising concerns about road safety. This event could impact automotive regulations and insurance sectors, potentially affecting market dynamics in transportation safety.
Hotspots
Most active regions
Global
Dominant type: aircraft
59
signals
Ukraine/Black Sea
Dominant type: aircraft
3
signals
Persian Gulf
Dominant type: aircraft
3
signals
United States
Dominant type: geopolitics
2
signals
Iran
Dominant type: crime
2
signals
Alaska
Dominant type: earthquake
3
signals
Coverage
Recent reporting tied to live events
disaster
Volcano Philippines: Mayon Erupts with Pyroclastic Flows, Disrupting Traffic
Update on the eruption of Mayon Volcano in the Philippines, including pyroclastic flows, traffic disruptions, evacuations, and official warnings.
conflict
Ukraine Conflict: Russia Loses 1,080 Soldiers in Past Day
A factual situation report on recent developments in the Ukraine conflict, including Russian military losses and advances towards fortified areas, based on official sources.
disaster
Earthquake Japan: 5.7-Magnitude Quake Strikes Western Japan
A 5.7-magnitude earthquake hit western Japan, affecting Nara Prefecture and Osaka, with no tsunami warning issued, as reported by multiple sources.
conflict
Conflict in Ukraine: Russian Troops Advance Towards Kostiantynivka
This situation report covers recent Russian advances towards Kostiantynivka, Ukrainian defensive actions, and reported Russian losses based on official updates.
About this tracker
What the Live World Map Shows
The live world event map displays significant events happening across the globe right now — earthquakes, armed conflicts, wildfires, volcanic eruptions, storms, floods, and geopolitical developments — all on a single interactive map. Each event is geolocated and color-coded by category so you can identify event types at a glance. Cluster markers appear when multiple events are concentrated in one region; zooming in separates them into individual pins.
Click any marker to see a summary: what happened, when, severity level, and links to the relevant specialist tracker for deeper context. Use the category filters at the top to isolate specific event types. Combine category and severity filters to build a personalized view — for example, geophysical events at high severity only, or all conflict events regardless of intensity. The map updates continuously as new events are detected and classified. For a numeric summary of overall global stability, see the global risk index.
Reading Event Clusters
Geographic clustering on the map is often more significant than any single event. When multiple events of the same type concentrate in a region — an earthquake swarm beneath a volcano, for example — it signals compounding physical processes. When different event types cluster in the same area, the interaction effects can be severe: a major earthquake in an active conflict zone strains emergency response capacity across military and civilian systems simultaneously, as seen in Syria in 2023.
Clusters also emerge over time rather than only in space. Use the timeline slider to scroll backward and see how an event cluster developed — did it begin as a single incident that attracted a military response, or did multiple unrelated events coincide? Understanding the sequence helps distinguish coincidence from causation. A wildfire cluster that develops after weeks of drought is a different risk signal than fires appearing simultaneously across a wide area, which may suggest coordinated arson.
The map deliberately avoids editorial prioritization — every event above the minimum detection threshold appears, regardless of media coverage. This means you can identify situations that are building in severity before they become major news stories. Regions showing a steady increase in event count and severity are worth monitoring even when individual events haven't yet attracted attention.
Cross-Category Correlations
Single-category trackers reveal depth in their domain; the live map reveals connections across domains. A volcanic eruption can trigger an earthquake swarm and simultaneously generate a tsunami warning — three separate event types appearing within hours at the same map coordinates. The 2022 Hunga Tonga eruption produced the largest atmospheric pressure wave recorded in modern history, generated tsunamis across the Pacific, and caused cable failures that isolated Tonga's communications. The live map showed all of these as a concentrated cluster, while individual trackers showed only their own slice.
Conflict-disaster intersections are especially consequential. A major earthquake striking an active war zone disrupts supply lines, disables field hospitals, and collapses already-damaged infrastructure. A drought deepening across a region already experiencing civil conflict accelerates displacement and resource competition. A hurricane making landfall near a conflict zone overwhelms a government simultaneously fighting on multiple fronts. These intersections are visible on the live map in ways that following individual tracker feeds cannot replicate.
For detailed event classification methodology — how each event type is defined, what thresholds trigger inclusion, and how severity scores are calculated — see the methodology page. The live map focuses on the geographic and temporal relationships; methodology explains the underlying standards.
How Different Users Read the Map
Travelers use the live map to assess conditions at their destination before departure and to monitor evolving situations during trips. A conference in Istanbul looks different if the map shows a seismic swarm along the North Anatolian Fault or a border incident escalating to the east. The map doesn't tell travelers what to do, but it surfaces the information needed to make informed decisions — and links to specialist trackers for deeper context.
Journalists and researchers use the map to identify emerging stories before wire services pick them up. Sensor-detected events (earthquakes, wildfires) appear on the map faster than any newsroom can report them. Conflict events typically appear within an hour of verification. The geographic view makes spatial patterns visible — a journalist covering Sahel instability can immediately see how events cluster along the Mali-Niger-Burkina Faso triangle.
Security professionals and risk analysts use the map to monitor threats near client locations, supply chain nodes, and energy infrastructure. Investors tracking commodity markets watch for events near oil-producing regions, major shipping lanes, and agricultural zones that drive commodity price movements. Each of these users benefits from the cross-category view that no single specialist tracker provides. For deep dives, use the specialist pages: earthquakes, conflicts, wildfires, volcanoes, and disasters.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often does the map update?
The map updates continuously as new events are detected and classified. Sensor-based events like earthquakes appear within minutes. Human-reported events like conflicts and political developments are typically added within an hour of verification. Existing events are updated as new information becomes available.
What types of events are shown?
The map displays earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, tropical storms, floods, wildfires, armed conflicts, military operations, political developments, and environmental emergencies. Each category uses distinct visual markers and colors. For the full classification framework, see the methodology page.
How are severity levels determined?
Severity is assessed using category-specific criteria. For natural disasters, factors include physical intensity, affected population, and infrastructure damage potential. For conflicts, severity considers casualty reports, territorial impact, and escalation risk. For full methodology details, see the methodology page.
Where does the data come from?
Data is sourced from official agencies (USGS, national meteorological services), international organizations (UN, WHO), verified news reporting, and sensor networks (seismometers, satellite imagery). An AI classification system processes incoming data, and events are cross-referenced against multiple sources before appearing on the map.
How is this different from watching the news?
News coverage focuses on stories with editorial value and may miss smaller but significant events. This map shows all detected events above a minimum threshold regardless of media interest, plotted geographically so spatial patterns are visible. You can filter by category and severity to create a personalized intelligence view that no single news outlet provides.
What is the risk index shown on the map?
The global risk index is a composite score reflecting overall world stability based on the volume, severity, and distribution of active events. It ranges from 0 (minimal risk) to 100 (extreme global instability). You can view the full breakdown and historical trend on the dedicated global risk index page.
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Last updated 5/3/2026, 6:45:28 AM