Diane Abbott also tweeted that one of the lessons to be learned from the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire is that «fire puts out water,» and called for the UK government to do
something about the drought in the province of Davao del Norte in Indonesia, which is actually located in the Philippines.
«The reality is that politicians who say government «can do
something about droughts, floods, sea levels, hurricanes, and tornadoes are practicing the equivalent of medieval witchcraft.»
Not exact matches
Blass is class and so are you if you heed the author's plea to do
something about the terrible
drought that has befallen baseball verse
I agree with your sentiment that
drought is the big driver on impact, and Wally emphasized the possibility for mega-droughts as
something to worry
about re future abrupt changes.
And though, eventually, this
drought will end, unless
something is done
about worldwide human greenhouse gas emissions, these kinds of extreme events will continue to recur and worsen.
The real fallacy is thinking we can «do
something about it» an event that occurs naturally - global cooling, global warming, regional cooling, regional warming,
drought, monsoon, etc..
However, since climate models are better able to capture broad patterns of middle atmospheric pressure (which are strongly linked to precipitation) than precipitation itself, it's likely that we can still say
something meaningful
about trends in large - scale atmospheric patterns conducive to low precipitation (and, therefore,
drought).