Are We Making Nature More Extremist Than Al Queda?

authordefault
on

As greenhouse-gas emissions rise, North America is likely to experience more droughts and excessive heat in some regions even as intense downpours and hurricanes pound others more often, according to a report issued yesterday by the U.S. Climate Change Scienceย Program.

The 162-page study, which was led by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, provides the most comprehensive assessment yet of how global warming has helped to transform the climate of the United States and Canada over the past 50 years โ€“ and how it may do so in theย future.

Some of the high (low) light of the NOAA reportย include:

  • Abnormally hot days and nights, along with heat waves, are very likely to become more common. Cold nights are very likely to become lessย common.
  • Sea ice extent is expected to continue to decrease and may even disappear in the Arctic Ocean in summer in comingย decades.
  • Precipitation, on average, is likely to be less frequent but moreย intense.
  • Droughts are likely to become more frequent and severe in someย regions.
  • Hurricanes will likely have increased precipitation andย wind.
  • The strongest cold-season storms in the Atlantic and Pacific are likely to produce stronger winds and higher extreme waveย heights.

Related Posts

Analysis
on

For some separatists, ignoring Indigenous rights is not only a side effect of an independent Alberta, but an explicit goal.

For some separatists, ignoring Indigenous rights is not only a side effect of an independent Alberta, but an explicit goal.
Opinion
on

Democratic innovation as a pathway for revitalising global climate action.

Democratic innovation as a pathway for revitalising global climate action.
on

The Alberta premier belongs to a U.S. group called the Governors Coalition for Energy Security thatโ€™s led by Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, Trumpโ€™s envoy to Greenland.

The Alberta premier belongs to a U.S. group called the Governors Coalition for Energy Security thatโ€™s led by Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, Trumpโ€™s envoy to Greenland.
Series: MAGA
on

The people behind the reports are tied to the fossil fuel industry and climate science denial groups.

The people behind the reports are tied to the fossil fuel industry and climate science denial groups.