There was a large wall here at 11am. Storm Bert didn't see things that way.
Storms aren't new, but their modern frequency and intensity is.
At 1.5° above preindustrial baseline there's 11% more water in the atmosphere.
We're cruising, comfortably, towards 2° by 2040.
Just saying.
Storms aren't new, but their modern frequency and intensity is.
At 1.5° above preindustrial baseline there's 11% more water in the atmosphere.
We're cruising, comfortably, towards 2° by 2040.
Just saying.
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And, being done, thus Wall away doth go 🌊
We probably have another 5 years before things go back to usual.
Hope all are safe!
Are you wanting to give readers the impression that you think there is some kind of direct link between this event (eruption) and increased flooding (around the world; in the UK)?
Directly caused by the volcano and the water vapor it ejected.
Do you think this is a more significant impact (to weather, extreme events) than climate change and warming of global temperatures?
The water cycle is easily understood and can't be denied. And those very simple processses are coming to bite us in the ass.
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River Wye looking high again tonight. Happening more and more often, even in the four years since we’ve been here.
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He hasn't learnt anything new since.
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It is among the most "expensive" chemicals to melt, heat or evaporate. Without water vapour things would be about 35 C colder.
Heard Llechryd bridge is underwater.
Bad in Worcestershire/Shropshire borders too.
* though they sure make nuclear reactors look like a bad idea
It’s 10°c just now.
A few days ago, the daily high was 1°c.
Not that I object to enjoying the milder temperature, that isn’t right.
This might help calm your fears too (help you sleep at night)...Climate: The Movie https://g.co/kgs/op2xqZh
Climate cycles are normal, as are extreme climate cycles. That doesn't remove the evidence which shows that we are currently responsible for many of the catastrophic weather events which we're seeing.