And the real concern that at that point you start to get not
just severe global warming effects, but you start to see kind of an irreversible trend.
Not exact matches
First of all, my comment on the intelligence of the British public related to their ability to hear a claim such as
global warming could cause more
severe winters and understand that
just because it sounds counter-intuitive it shouldn't necessarily be dismissed out of hand.
flmark: I have written enough about
global warming and have pretty much decided not to bother with the issue anymore,... but... HOW WAS YOUR SUMMER????? People
just don't get it.
Global warming means more
SEVERE weather.
To pluck
just one of Adam's stories from the pile, on the Thursday he was claiming that «
severe global warming could make half the world's inhabited areas literally too hot to live in» and that «people will not be able to adapt to a much
warmer climate as well as previously thought».
In addition to the evidence that we reported on here and here, a couple of brand new papers
just hit the scientific journals this month that emphatically reject the hypothesis that
global warming is leading to more blocking patterns in the jet stream (and accompanying
severe weather outbreaks across the U.S.).
If that happens, the activists crying «wolf» (e.g., attributing any
severe weather to
global warming, even when scientists and history say otherwise) might discredit not
just themselves but climate science — and perhaps even science.
Though for half of the recent mass animal death events listed on the map weird weather is to blame, even if different specific weather events: Bucking the
global trend of continued are marked
warming, the UK
just had the coldest December in a century; Australia experienced
severe flooding after experiencing recent
severe drought and heat; parts of North America have also had the usual weather patterns disrupted.
It's
just more complicated than cleaning up power plants, and will remain one of the biggest challenges as the US tries to push down emissions to fend off
severe global warming.