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Re: there is absolutely no correlation .... mierin sedai - 30/09/2004 09:52:08 AM

the person writing seems to have fallen in love with the term "climate alarmists".

still, though:
In an astonishing announcement on global warming and extreme weather, the World Meteorological Organization signaled last night that the world's weather is going haywire.

In a startling report, the WMO, which normally produces detailed scientific reports and staid statistics at the year's end, highlighted record extremes in weather and climate occurring all over the world in recent weeks, from Switzerland's hottest-ever June to a record month for tornadoes in the United States - and linked them to climate change.

The unprecedented warning takes its force and significance from the fact that it is not coming from Greenpeace or Friends of the Earth, but from an impeccably respected UN Organization that is not given to hyperbole (though environmentalists will seize on it to claim that the direst warnings of climate change are being borne out).

The Geneva-based body, to which the weather services of 185 countries contribute, takes the view that events this year in Europe, America and Asia are so remarkable that the world needs to be made aware of it immediately.

The extreme weather it documents, such as record high and low temperatures, record rainfall and record storms in different parts of the world, is consistent with predictions of global warming. Supercomputer models show that, as the atmosphere warms, the climate not only becomes hotter but much more unstable. "Recent scientific assessments indicate that, as the global temperatures continue to warm due to climate change, the number and intensity of extreme events might increase," the WMO said, giving a striking series of examples.

In southern France, record temperatures were recorded in June, rising above 40C in places - temperatures of 5C to 7C above the average.

In Switzerland, it was the hottest June in at least 250 years, environmental historians said. In Geneva, since 29 May, daytime temperatures have not fallen below 25C, making it the hottest June recorded.

In the United States, there were 562 May tornadoes, which caused 41 deaths. This set a record for any month. The previous record was 399 in June 1992.

In India, this year's pre-monsoon heatwave brought peak temperatures of 45C - 2C to 5C above the norm. At least 1,400 people died in India due to the hot weather. In Sri Lanka, heavy rainfall from Tropical Cyclone 01B exacerbated wet conditions, resulting in flooding and landslides and killing at least 300 people. The infrastructure and economy of south-west Sri Lanka was heavily damaged. A reduction of 20-30 per cent is expected in the output of low-grown tea in the next three months.

Last month was also the hottest in England and Wales since 1976, with average temperatures of 16C. The WMO said: "These record extreme events (high temperatures, low temperatures and high rainfall amounts and droughts) all go into calculating the monthly and annual averages, which, for temperatures, have been gradually increasing over the past 100 years.

"New record extreme events occur every year somewhere in the globe, but in recent years the number of such extremes have been increasing.

"According to recent climate-change scientific assessment reports of the joint WMO/United Nations Environmental Program Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the global average surface temperature has increased since 1861. Over the 20th century the increase has been around 0.6C.

"New analyses of proxy data for the northern hemisphere indicate that the increase in temperature in the 20th century is likely to have been the largest in any century during the past 1,000 years."

While the trend towards warmer temperatures has been uneven over the past century, the trend since 1976 is roughly three times that for the whole period.

Global average land and sea surface temperatures in May 2003 were the second highest since records began in 1880. Considering land temperatures only, last May was the warmest on record.

It is possible that 2003 will be the hottest year ever recorded. The 10 hottest years in the 143-year-old global temperature record have now all been since 1990, with the three hottest being 1998, 2002 and 2001.

The unstable world of climate change has long been a prediction. Now, the WMO says, it is a reality.




Magnus Alexander corpore parvus erat
Dissenting voice of wotmania
Frightfully stubborn pacifist

Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent




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A propos the russians ratifying kyoto... - 30/09/2004 08:38:48 AM 151 Views
We can hope.... - 30/09/2004 08:49:18 AM 19 Views
It bugs me that... - 30/09/2004 09:00:05 AM 21 Views
exactly how do we segué... - 30/09/2004 09:10:52 AM 36 Views
... - 30/09/2004 09:19:54 AM 34 Views
there is absolutely no correlation .... - 30/09/2004 09:28:52 AM 32 Views
Re: there is absolutely no correlation .... - 30/09/2004 09:52:08 AM 28 Views
you're comparing... - 30/09/2004 10:01:30 AM 24 Views
pedantic. - 30/09/2004 10:19:38 AM 25 Views
missing the point - 30/09/2004 10:29:27 AM 18 Views
Well,give us a link to the studies. - 30/09/2004 10:40:58 AM 14 Views
did it already - 30/09/2004 11:05:55 AM 11 Views
missing the point again - 30/09/2004 11:28:01 AM 10 Views
extreme weather in general - 30/09/2004 10:50:08 AM 20 Views
thank you *NM* - 30/09/2004 11:08:18 AM 4 Views
let me rephrase my question, though - 30/09/2004 12:07:44 PM 15 Views
Re: let me rephrase my question, though - 30/09/2004 12:43:06 PM 11 Views
whatever happened to - 30/09/2004 01:00:56 PM 8 Views
you weren't even wrong - 30/09/2004 11:32:11 AM 10 Views
you're being illogical - 30/09/2004 11:13:53 AM 10 Views
the logical flaw to your argument here.... - 30/09/2004 11:08:44 AM 18 Views
actually that was my point... - 30/09/2004 11:13:36 AM 15 Views
BUT - 30/09/2004 11:21:03 AM 14 Views
perhaps you should go back and reread the original post... - 30/09/2004 12:19:45 PM 15 Views
Again you are missing the point - 30/09/2004 08:36:08 PM 11 Views
this has become ridiculous... - 01/10/2004 09:25:50 AM 5 Views
well.... - 30/09/2004 10:59:49 AM 13 Views
my point was specific to Atlantic hurricanes.... - 30/09/2004 11:10:20 AM 8 Views
again though - 30/09/2004 11:16:50 AM 9 Views
The US will not ratify Kyoto with the next two decades - 30/09/2004 02:13:44 PM 23 Views
I know - 30/09/2004 02:30:13 PM 11 Views
I'm not sure I follow... - 30/09/2004 02:31:07 PM 16 Views
Re: I'm not sure I follow... - 30/09/2004 02:32:22 PM 12 Views
I hope not. *NM* - 30/09/2004 03:20:03 PM 5 Views
why? *NM* - 30/09/2004 03:21:27 PM 7 Views
Re: why? - 30/09/2004 03:39:44 PM 16 Views
Re: why? - 30/09/2004 03:44:31 PM 5 Views
Re: why? - 30/09/2004 04:07:16 PM 7 Views
well... - 30/09/2004 04:09:50 PM 7 Views
Re: It's easy to get a parliament to pass a treaty - 30/09/2004 04:13:18 PM 21 Views
Re: It's easy to get a parliament to pass a treaty - 30/09/2004 04:22:33 PM 16 Views
I heard yesterday... - 30/09/2004 04:32:35 PM 15 Views
That would be learning from their mistakes - 30/09/2004 06:26:34 PM 12 Views
*giggle* - 01/10/2004 03:23:09 AM 5 Views