Remember that
you read this on an early June day that feels like mid-August - - as summer heat,
rising temperatures, plus on-again-off-again d
rought and storms with added intensity turn Wisconsin into Tennessee, or maybe Missouri:
According to data released Thursday by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
U.S. temperatures have been high enough to make it the warmest spring
on record, the warmest year-to-date and the warmest 12-month period as
well.
“This warmth is an example of
what we would expect to see more often in a warming world.
Understanding that the United States and the rest of the planet are
warming along with preparing for eventualities like this is one way our
nation can become climate-smart,” Deke Arndt, chief of the climate
monitoring branch, National Climatic Data Center, says in the video above.
A subject on this blog for years:
I attended in 2003 a US Environmental Protection Agency program in Chicago on climate change sponsored by Great Lakes Mayors; the consensus scientific prediction - - just like this one - - was for intense rain events that would put pressure on municipalities' stormwater infrastructure.
And certainly in mainstream media. A long piece more than five years ago in the Journal Sentinel
had this to say:
Wisconsin's temperature rose 0.7 degrees during the 20th century,
according to the State Climatology Office. Globally, the average
increase was 1.5 degrees.
In the climate world, these are big leaps.
Since 1920, global temperatures have risen at a faster rate than any
time in at least 2,000 years, according to the National Academy of
Sciences.
In Milwaukee, the average temperature over the past 30 years has
jumped 2 degrees from the same 30-year period a century ago, according
to the State Climatology Office.
The higher temperatures coincide with rising levels of carbon dioxide, most of which is the result of burning fossil fuels.
But there are additional explanations for the Earth's warming. Some
scientists believe the natural cycles of cooling and the current warming
trend have been overlooked...
By the end of the century, the most accepted prediction is that the
Earth will warm by 3.2 to 7.2 degrees. This would be two to five times
as high as the change in temperature we've experienced since 1900.
The assessment came last month from the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, which surveyed the latest findings in climate research.
The predicted temperature increases would dwarf those that have been
experienced in thousands of years.
In Wisconsin, winters by 2100 could be more like Missouri's today,
and Lake Michigan water levels could drop as much as 5 feet in the next
100 years, according to a study by the Union of Concerned Scientists.
Laughing my ass off!!! Glad you got over the loss of the recall and have developed a good sense of humor. This is one funny story.
ReplyDeleteGlad your ignorant ass is so amused.
ReplyDeleteYea, you must be right when 99 out of 100 scientists are wrong. Yea, that's the ticket.
How does one laugh their ass off. Is that like flatulence emitting from your mouth?
ReplyDelete