Just last week, preliminary research at the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences in Kiel, Germany, suggested that natural variations in sea temperatures will cancel out the decade's 0.3 C global
average rise predicted by the IPCC, before emissions start to warm the Earth again after 2015.
Not exact matches
Experts expect online sales to continue
rising, with Forrester
predicting that ecommerce's
average annual growth rate of 9.32 % will hold steady through 2020.
By their estimation, the
average rate for a 30 - year fixed home loan will
rise more slowly than what Freddie Mac has
predicted.
In their latest forecast, published in January 2017, MBA economists
predicted that the
average rate for a 30 - year fixed mortgage would
rise to 4.70 % by the fourth quarter of 2017.
The Mortgage Bankers Association, for example, recently
predicted that the
average 30 - year mortgage rate would
rise to around 4.4 % by the fourth quarter of 2017.
Freddie Mac, the government - controlled buyer of mortgage securities, recently
predicted that the
average rate for a 30 - year fixed mortgage loan would
rise to 4.6 % by the end of 2016.
The EIA in February reported that Canada pumped an
average of 4.5 million barrels a day in 2015, and
predicted this would
rise to 4.8 million in 2017 as oil sands projects under construction when oil prices began to fall in 2014 come on line.
Currently sitting at around $ 30 - 35 a barrel, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce's Crystal Ball Report
predicts that, with supply set to exceed demand, the price of oil will likely
average around $ 35 per barrel throughout 2016, before
rising back to around $ 55 throughout 2017.
Analysts
predict the
average basket of food prices will
rise by 15 % by June 2013.
While the global
average rise is
predicted to be between 30 and 106 centimetres, he says tropical seas will
rise 10 or 20 per cent more, while polar seas will see a below -
average rise.
But climate models
predict reductions in dissolved oxygen in all oceans as
average global air and sea temperatures
rise, and this may be the main driver of what is happening there, she says.
Conservative climate models
predict that
average temperatures in the US Midwest will
rise by 4 °C over the next century.
But here's your question: why we should be concerned even with the global temperature
rise that has been
predicted, let's say by 2050, of probably around 2 degrees C; one should understand that in the Ice Age — the depths of the Ice Age — the Earth was colder on a global
average by about 5 degrees C.
Laaksonen and his colleagues did not try to
predict how Finland's temperatures will change in the coming decades, but according to the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's latest report, Arctic temperatures are likely to continue
rising faster than the global
average through the end of the 21st century.
On
average, nearly four Central Valley residents die prematurely every day because of the pollution, and experts
predict that within the next few years, as temperatures continue to
rise and population growth raises smog levels, one of every four children will have asthma.
A new study
predicts where the cat - like primates are likely to seek refuge if
average temperatures throughout the island
rise by 1.1 to 2.6 degrees by 2050, as
predicted.
On
average, the models
predicted an 11 percent increase in CAPE in the U.S. per degree Celsius
rise in global
average temperature by the end of the 21st century.
Because the models
predict little
average precipitation increase nationwide over this period, the product of CAPE and precipitation gives about a 12 percent
rise in cloud - to - ground lightning strikes per degree in the contiguous U.S., or a roughly 50 percent increase by 2100 if Earth sees the expected 4 - degree Celsius increase (7 degrees Fahrenheit) in temperature.
Similarly, while we can not
predict the weather in a particular place and on a particular day in 100 years time, we can be sure that on
average it will be far warmer if greenhouse gases continue to
rise.
With its latest annual effort at what is known as decadal forecasting, the Met Office is
predicting that global temperatures will continue to
rise from 2016 through 2020, with those years likely falling between 0.5 ° and 1.4 °F (0.28 and 0.77 °C) above the 1981 - 2010
average.
Climate models have
predicted the least temperature
rise would be on
average 1.65 °C (2.97 °F), but upper estimates vary a lot,
averaging 5.2 °C (9.36 °F).
Alaska is an anomaly, with temperatures
rising an
average of 3 degrees in the last 60 years, twice as fast as the continental U.S. Scientists
predict that temperatures will
rise another two to four degrees by 2050.
Gas prices are climbing and analysts
predict it may be another month before motorists get relief from the most expensive fuel in recent history.Pump prices have
risen an estimated 2 cents a gallon in the Orlando area since last week, when the American Automobile Association released its monthly price - check survey, the motorists club said.That survey found April prices for self - serve, regular unleaded
averaging $ 1.278 a gallon.
Freddie Mac, the government - controlled buyer of mortgage securities, recently
predicted that the
average rate for a 30 - year fixed mortgage loan would
rise to 4.6 % by the end of 2016.
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predict which stocks will be
average performers, which will be losers, and which ones will turn into the superstocks that wind up
rising five-fold, 10-fold or more.
With the
predicted rise of home prices and
average mortgage rates, it seems the best deals for home buyers might be in the rear - view mirror.
The Mortgage Bankers Association, for example, recently
predicted that the
average 30 - year mortgage rate would
rise to around 4.4 % by the fourth quarter of 2017.
In December 2015, they
predicted that the
average rate for a 30 - year fixed home loan would
rise to 4.8 % by the end of 2016.
The
average price of unleaded is up 3p / litre in the last month alone, and the RAC
predicts that because oil prices worldwide are
rising, it could hit 126.5 p / litre next week - the highest
average price since Oct 2014.
RE / MAX issued a similar forecast,
predicting average house price to
rise by a more bullish 6 %.
All I can say is that my funny internal feelings tell me that there is no hard data to show that
average global temperatures, in 2007, are
rising as fast as the GCMs
predict.
Many recent studies (e.g. Hansen & Sato) have claimed that future
rise in global
average temperature (GAT) will create a much greater effect on sea level than IPCC AR4
predicts.
Can anyone provide hard data which demonstrates that, here in 2007,
average global temperatures are
rising as fast as the GCMs
predict?
There seem to be two answers; either temperatures are going to
rise at an
average annual rate as
predicted by the IPCC and the GCMs, or temperatures are going to reach a maximum and then decline.
The forecast for the current century
predicts an
average rise by 2.5 C - 3 C (with extreme limits from 1.4 C to 5.8 C).
This would mean that the 0.3 °C global
average temperature
rise which has been
predicted for the next decade by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change may not happen, according to the paper published in the scientific journal Nature.»
For example, as long as the
rise in global
average temperature stays below 3 degrees Celsius, some models
predict that global food production could increase because of the longer growing season at mid - to high - latitudes, provided adequate water resources are available.
The government's Independent Committee on Climate Change has found that green subsidies and taxes already add # 45 to the
average duel fuel bill, but
predict this to
rise to # 100 by 2020, and # 175 by 2030.
The UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
predicts that global
average temperatures could
rise by somewhere between 2 °C and 6 °C by the end of this century.
The
predicted rise in
average global temperatures of 4 °C in the course of this century would transform human life over a major part of the planet.
But in the long term, the researchers say, this will not help, because of the high
average temperature
rises predicted.
All in all, scientists expect sea level
rise for the US East Coast to be nearly double the global
average predicted for this Century.
They found out how to contain overall global temperature
rise to the
predicted 2020
average: some regions however became — in their computer models — hotter or cooler than the citizens might appreciate.
Latest research by the Brookings Institution in the US
predicts that climate change is going to result in
average temperatures
rising across the North African region by 3 °C by 2050.
The study
predicts average annual temperatures in New York state will
rise by 4 to 9 degrees by 2080 and precipitation will
rise by 5 to 15 percent, with most of it in the winter....
Because the models
predict little
average precipitation increase nationwide over this period, the product of CAPE and precipitation gives about a 12 percent
rise in cloud - to - ground lightning strikes per degree in the contiguous U.S., or a roughly 50 percent increase by 2100 if Earth sees the expected 4 - degree Celsius increase (7 degrees Fahrenheit) in temperature.
This is
predicted to produce changes such as the melting of glaciers and ice sheets, more extreme temperature ranges, significant changes in weather conditions and a global
rise in
average sea levels.
say it has been
predicted that «the
average temperature in the semiarid northwest portion of China in 2050 will be 2.2 °C higher than it was in 2002,» and they report that based on the observed results of their study, this increase in temperature «will lead to a significant change in the growth stages and water use of winter wheat,» such that «crop yields at both high and low altitudes will likely increase,» by 2.6 % at low altitudes and 6.0 % at high altitudes... Even without the benefits of the aerial fertilization effect and the anti-transpiration effect of the ongoing
rise in the air's CO2 content, the increase in temperature that is
predicted by climate models for the year 2050, if it ever comes to pass, will likely lead to increases in winter wheat production in the northwestern part of China, not the decreases that climate alarmists routinely
predict.»
Under Watson's tenure, the IPCC last year produced its third comprehensive assessment of the state of climate science, concluding that» [t] here is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities,» and
predicting that
average global temperatures will
rise between 3 and 10 degrees Fahrenheit by the endof the century — conclusions reaffirmed last spring at White House request by the National Academy of Sciences.