But evidence is mounting that a warmer climate is sparking
more weather extremes, especially over northern latitudes from Alaska to Minnesota to New England.
• Some crop yields decrease 40 %, perhaps more because estimates about decreases in crop yield don't include
more weather extremes.
But since climate scientists already expect a wide range of negative consequences from rising temperatures, including higher sea level,
more weather extremes and increasing risks to human health, anything that accelerates warming is a concern.
Not exact matches
Similarly, the Northeast is expected to experience
more extreme weather events, like hot summers and, in the short run, super cold winters.
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 Internatio
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 Internatio
more online purchasing during
extreme weather events, such as blizzards or flooding, says Sarah Quinlan, senior vice president of market insights for MasterCard International.
Many such experts say the disasters in the sprawling suburban and petro - industrial landscape around Houston and along the crowded coasts of Florida reinforce the urgent idea that resilient infrastructure is needed
more than ever, particularly as human - driven climate change helps drive
extreme weather.
No one can control the
weather, which is likely to become
more extreme, but it is critical to do
more to understand vulnerabilities that exist at the wildland - urban interface.
This implies that risks are not too big or overarching (like resource scarcity, rising levels of atmospheric CO2, or global warming) but are
more focused e.g.
extreme weather, increased greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture or from energy use, or a lack of fresh water.
This is in part due the fact that populations are growing and
more are living in harm's way, increasing the impact of
extreme weather.
We can rebuild Puerto Rico's electrical system to be
more resilient to
extreme weather.
Online,
more than 11,000 Global Citizens have called on world leaders to help the millions of people affected by
extreme weather around the world in the past year.
CNN: Survey: One in three Americans see
extreme weather as a sign of biblical end times
More than a third of Americans see recent
extreme weather as a sign that the world is in biblical «end times,» according to a survey released Thursday.
Thames Water workers help distribute bottled water, at a bottled water station in Hampstead, north London, for one of the thousands of people in the London area who were left without water for
more than 36 hours after
extreme weather caused burst pipes.
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.
«The National Government and Fonterra's preoccupation with growth at all costs is making the dairy sector
more vulnerable and less resilient to swings in world commodity prices as well as drought and
extreme weather events,» Sage said.
It's time for baseball, in tandem with expansion, to focus on quality over quantity and reduce the number of regular season games so that (a) the front - end of the season is
more likely to played under
more favorable conditions than it currently is and (2) the determination of the sport's champion is played in conditions that showcase the championship and let it be determined without exposing those games to
weather extremes.
Climate change will lead to
more heatwaves, droughts and other
extreme weather conditions.
«New Yorkers know too well the devastation caused by climate change, and in order to slow the effects of
extreme weather and build our communities to be stronger and
more resilient, we must make significant investments in renewable energy,» Cuomo said.
Local growers and farmers say climate change is creating new challenges, with
extreme weather conditions, sudden storms, rising temperatures and drought making it even
more difficult to cope with a perennially unpredictable Mother Nature.
He argued that climate change meant
more extreme weather is forecast and that recent floods in Australia, earthquakes in New Zealand and Haiti and a famine in Africa were set to be repeated around the world in the future.
ability of absorbing moderate damage in future (+3 C, 50 cm higher sea level and possibly a bit
more cases of
extreme weather in a century?
In the wake of devastating hurricanes and other
extreme weather in the past several weeks,
more than 60 organizations signed a letter calling on Governor Andrew Cuomo to move New York to 100 percent clean, renewable energy as soon as possible.
He didn't utter the words «climate change» but Gov. Andrew Cuomo said at a news conference earlier today that
weather is getting
more extreme and dangerous, forcing New York to rethink how it builds its infrastructure and transportation.
And the governor says
extreme weather occurrences are becoming
more common.
«As catastrophic and
extreme weather has become
more routine, this facility is no longer viable in its current location,» Howard Glaser, Cuomo's state operations director, wrote in a memo to the Federal Emergency Management Agency late last week.
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 warns.
In fact, one symptom of a changing climate could be
more varied or
more extreme weather — but a couple of heavy snows wouldn't prove that either.
The pressure system has been strengthening since the mid-20th century, making the
weather patterns in each destination
more extreme.
Whether or not farmers agree about the causes or even existence of climate change, researchers agree that farmers still have to prepare their farms for the consequences of rising temperatures, increased atmospheric CO2 and
more extreme weather events.
In developing countries,
extreme weather could drive even
more people away from farms and into overcrowded shantytowns.
How can we make crops
more tolerant to the
extremes and unpredictability of
weather?
Climate change is likely to usher in an era of
more extreme weather, including the heavy rains and flooding that create ideal mosquito breeding grounds.
Today, ice sheets are melting, sea level is rising, oceans are warming, and
weather events are becoming
more extreme.
For instance, though about 30 percent of farmers surveyed agreed that
extreme weather events will become
more frequent in the future, 52 percent agreed that farmers should take additional steps to protect their land from increased precipitation.
It's a subject that has not gotten much attention, even as
more research focuses on how to reduce agricultural greenhouse gas emissions and how to make farming
more resilient to the impacts of
extreme weather.
According to a 2013 study of California farmers, factors like exposure to
extreme weather events and perceived changes in water availability made farmers
more likely to believe in climate change, while negative experiences with environmental policies can make farmers less likely to believe that climate change is occurring, said Meredith Niles, a postdoctoral research fellow at Harvard's Sustainability Science Program and lead author of the study.
«I think in agriculture you're going to find that farmers are
more and
more aware of
extremes in their
weather.
While they did not find any conclusive differences between the three years, it is possible that
extreme weather events could lead to
more dramatic differences between the chemical fingerprints of some annual rings, and the authors conclude that
more extensive sampling is required.
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.
We envision a city that is
more resilient to
extreme weather.
According to the Rutgers - Camden researcher, the study supports the hypothesis that organisms living in high - stress urban medians possess adaptions to disturbance, making them
more resilient to the effects of
extreme weather events than organisms living in relatively low - stress city parks.
Large power outages are expected to become
more frequent as the result of a changing climate, where the frequency and intensity of
extreme weather events is increasing, as well as geomagnetic storms and attacks on grid infrastructure.
Further, such
extreme events will affect other species in the region, which have long existed under
more predictable
weather regimes.
«The loss of sea ice in the Arctic and changes to heat storage will lead to changes in
weather patterns that could bring
extreme heat and cold events to the continental United States similar to those seen in recent years, and possibly even
more intense.»
Global temperatures have increased,
extreme weather events are
more common, and species are fleeing their habitats.
It is also investigating ways to update the building code to protect against
more extreme weather events, and to build effective storm - surge barriers.
«Jet stream changes since 1960s linked to
more extreme weather.»
Not only is global
weather becoming much
more extreme, it is becoming even
more extreme than anyone expected.
It seems to follow that experiencing
extreme weather would make people
more supportive of policies to adapt to climate change.
But scientists agree that climate change will up the ante considerably by bringing
more extreme weather gyrations — searing drought one year, followed by torrential storms that can wash away cracked soil and destroy crops rather than quench their thirst.