Not exact matches
More from USA
Today:
Hurricane Matthew shifts closer to Florida,
forecast says
Hurricane Matthew: Here are scenarios for the USA Sprites dance above
Hurricane Matthew
It isn't possible
today (12/28/2006) to confidently predict the date, intensity and track for the first
hurricane of 2007 (weather), but
forecasts can be made for the 2007
hurricane season (climate).
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE New York Press Office: (212) 346-5500;
[email protected] New York, April 5, 2018 — Dr. Philip Klotzbach of Colorado State University (CSU), a non-resident scholar for the Insurance Information Institute (I.I.I.), released CSU's first extended range
forecast for the 2018 Atlantic
hurricane season
today...
The climate
forecast for 2100 looks to be about the same - the world's climate (s) will be about the same as
today, possibly a bit warmer or cooler (<.5 degC), with rain, drought,
hurricanes, large amounts of polar ice, and the possiblity of some worldwide disaster.
The Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, that may depend on the thermohaline circulation and thus ocean currents in the Atlantic, is not set up to match
today's state, but it is a critical component of the Atlantic
hurricanes and it undoubtedly affects
forecasts for the next decade from Brazil to Europe.
* hope that the scientists
forecasting low temperature rise are correct, * start mitigation programs (much of which are necessary anyway, such as preparation of the US East coast for rising sea levels (necessary anyway to prepare for normal
hurricane impacts) * crash fund climate research — rather than the underfunded, uncoordinated work done
today — to better predict and prepare, * crash fund energy research, * push use of alternatives (I don't expect much from this), * take steps to crash the global economy — the alarmists recommendation, which I reject.