Details are provided on why these observations are needed to understand the causes of climate change, analyse the potential impacts, evaluate the adaptation options and enable characterization of extreme
events such as floods, droughts and heat waves.
Within these multi-decadal epochs significant variability exists in the magnitude and frequency of ENSO impacts resulting in elevated (or reduced depending on the climate state) risk of extreme
events such as floods, bushfires and droughts.»
Ecological surprises include rapid and abrupt changes in temperature and precipitation, leading to an increase in extreme
events such as floods, fires and landslides, increases in eutrophication, invasion by alien species, or rapid and sudden increases in disease (Carpenter et al., 2005).
African countries rank as at high risk in the index, partly due to their natural susceptibility to
events such as floods, droughts, fires, storms or landslides.
Around the globe, extreme
events such as floods, droughts, hurricanes, tornadoes, and heat waves increasingly result in forced migration and loss of life, property, and security.
which means specific, extreme
events such as floods and droughts.
An increase in the frequency of extreme weather
events such as floods, severe dust storms and hurricanes;
The Met Office hopes it will improve the forecasting of extreme
events such as the floods at Boscastle in 2004 or the Somerset Level deluge last winter.
[2] Expected impacts include a sea level rise up to 6 - 7m, melting permafrost in the arctic regions, large - scale agricultural losses, increased water scarcity, a collapse of the Gulf Stream in the Atlantic Ocean and an increase of extreme weather
events such as floods, droughts or devastating storms.
The report, which was supported by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, stresses that extreme weather
events such as floods or droughts are just as significant as rising average temperatures and rainfall.
The silent, small - recurring
events such as floods and droughts can take a huge toll on communities which lack essential health services and other coping capacities», Ms. Mizutori added.
As a result of climate change, global temperatures are expected to continue to rise, resulting in sea level rise and an increase in the frequency of extreme weather
events such as floods, droughts, landslides and storms.
These include hydrological
events such as floods, storm surges, and coastal flooding, plus meteorological events like storms, tropical cyclones, heat / cold waves, drought, and wildfires.
One of the key effects of climate change is that extreme weather
events such as floods, droughts, heatwaves, and rainfall variations become more frequent and more severe.
Events such as floods, earthquakes, and maintenance damage are not traditionally covered under normal insurance policies.
Extreme climatic
events such as floods and droughts are becoming more frequent and more drastic in their effects.
People who recently experienced severe weather
events such as floods, storms and drought are more likely to support policies to adapt to the effects of climate change, according to a new study co-authored by an Indiana University researcher.
The researchers will look at how the natural seasonality of river levels influences aquatic and terrestrial grasses, fisheries, and forest productivity in the floodplains, and how extreme
events such as floods and droughts may disturb this cycle.
Growing scarcity In addition to a growing scarcity of natural resources such as land, water and biodiversity «global agriculture will have to cope with the effects of climate change, notably higher temperatures, greater rainfall variability and more frequent extreme weather
events such as floods and droughts,» Diouf warned.
Stronger and longer heat waves, more frequent extreme weather
events such as flooding and tropical cyclones, rises in sea level, and increased air pollution will become more the rule than the exception.
When an extreme weather
event such as flooding occurs, millions of people are displaced and both freshwater supply and agricultural production are affected.
In a warming world extreme weather
events such as flooding are set to become more common, making these floods an important test of Europe's capability to cope.
The third one — essentially looking at the impact of global warming on the probability of extreme
events such as this flood — is part of current climate research.
Not exact matches
Catastrophes can be caused by various natural
events, including, among others, hurricanes, tornadoes and other windstorms, earthquakes, hail, wildfires, severe winter weather,
floods, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions and other naturally occurring
events,
such as solar flares.
More customers than ever before are shopping online, and they have a tendency to do even more online purchasing during extreme weather
events,
such as blizzards or
flooding, says Sarah Quinlan, senior vice president of market insights for MasterCard International.
While damage caused by some types of natural
events —
such as lightning or wind — will usually be covered by commercial property insurance, you need a special policy if you want protection from
flood damage.
Recent extreme weather
events,
such as the
flooding in Ontario and Quebec last summer and the forest fires in British Columbia and Alberta, are directly connected to climate change, McKenna says.
Most atheists will pick stories they know will make people enraged and will respond with emotion
such as the
flood or any other
event caused by God.
Major
events that are now happening
such as hurricanes, earthquakes, and
flooding are not caused by God,
as a judgment from him.
These stories may or may not have been based on an
event,
such as the breach of the land barrier that kept the Black Sea below the level of the Mediterranean Sea or even the
flooding of the north end of the Red Sea, but there is no evidence for a global
flood.
When a terrible
event such as a tornado, wildfire,
flood, or other natural disaster happens, it's extremely traumatic for everyone affected.
«Current long term predictions indicate that these extreme weather variations will continue and situations
such as the current
flood events, and disruption caused, underline how adequate maintenance and funding of the network must be a fundamental part of UK transport policy.
And the worst is yet to come:
As the global thermostat rises, extreme weather events such as droughts and floods will become more frequent and intense in many regions, the United Nations warn
As the global thermostat rises, extreme weather
events such as droughts and floods will become more frequent and intense in many regions, the United Nations warn
as droughts and
floods will become more frequent and intense in many regions, the United Nations warns.
Global warming is causing not only a general increase in temperatures, but also an increase in the frequency and intensity of extreme weather
events,
such as flooding, heat waves and droughts.
Increased fluctuations in the path of the North Atlantic jet stream since the 1960s coincide with more extreme weather
events in Europe
such as heat waves, droughts, wildfires and
flooding, reports a University of Arizona - led team.
The digital camera not only tells the researchers about the greening of the site but also about
events they might not have otherwise been able to research,
such as when major
flood events occurred in 2015 and 2016.
«Dangerous» global warming includes consequences
such as increased risk of extreme weather and climate
events ranging from more intense heat waves, hurricanes, and
floods, to prolonged droughts.
A disturbance
event such as fire or
flood or an insect outbreak sweeps through a given ecosystem, and when the flames have died down and new shoots appear, they're not necessarily the same species
as populated the landscape before.
The ancient genome predates a mysterious migratory
event which occurred roughly 3,000 years ago, known
as the «Eurasian backflow», when people from regions of Western Eurasia
such as the Near East and Anatolia suddenly
flooded back into the Horn of Africa.
The article, «Extreme rainfall activity in the Australian tropics reflects changes in the El Niño / Southern Oscillation over the last two millennia,» presents a precisely dated stalagmite record of cave
flooding events that are tied to tropical cyclones, which include storms
such as hurricanes and typhoons.
NCAR, which is financed in part by the National Science Foundation, has spent several years searching for ways to extend the predicability of
floods, droughts, heat waves and other extreme weather
events from weeks to months
as a way to give weather - sensitive sectors
such as agriculture more time to protect themselves against costly losses.
To attribute any specific extreme weather
event —
such as the downpours that caused
flooding in Pakistan or Australia, for example — requires running
such computer models thousands of times to detect any possible human impact amidst all the natural influences on a given day's weather.
The researchers looked at real - world observations and confirmed that this temperature pattern does correspond with the double - peaked jet stream and waveguide patter associated with persistent extreme weather
events in the late spring and summer
such as droughts,
floods and heat waves.
While the illustrative example focuses on the
flooding hazard, the methodology can be applied to other extreme hydrologic
events,
such as hurricanes and tsunamis.
And, in a natural disaster
such as a
flood, hurricane or tsunami, connecting people via functioning bridges can mean the difference between life and death during the
event itself.
«Now we should reconsider the consequences of sporadic oxygen outbursts and their correlations to other major
events in Earth's history,
such as the banded - iron formation, snowball Earth, mass extinctions,
flood basalts, and supercontinent rifts.»
Changing climate patterns have had considerable impact in Texas in recent years in the form of extreme weather
events such as droughts,
floods, extreme heat.
«Now we should reconsider the consequences of sporadic oxygen outbursts and their correlations to other major
events in the Earth's history,
such as the banded - iron formation, snowball Earth, mass extinctions,
flood basalts, and supercontinent rifts.»
In addition to causing obvious, immediate dangers
such as drowning in a
flood, extreme
events can leave people without food and shelter, expose them to toxic chemical spills and facilitate the spread of disease.
Response: Holtec is also an industry leader in designing nuclear systems to withstand cataclysmic natural
events such as severe
flood, hyper - wind, tornado, tsunami, fire, earthquake, and human mendacity
such as a crashing aircraft or missiles, providing absolute and certain safety to the surrounding communities and environment.