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Report: Climate Change is Making Specific Weather Events More Extreme
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In this photo, a wildfire rages in the hills of the Los Angeles area (2017 stock image.) (istock)
CLICK HERE - RESEARCH - Explaining Extreme Events from a Climate Perspective
noaa.gov - December 9, 2019
A drought that parched the southwestern U.S. Extraordinary flooding in the Mid-Atlantic states. Heat waves that baked the Iberian peninsula and northeast Asia. Vanishing sea ice in the Bering Sea.
Scientists say these remarkable 2018 extreme weather events were made more likely by human-caused climate change, in new research published today in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (BAMS).
The eighth edition of the report, "Explaining Extreme Events in 2018 From a Climate Perspective," presents 20 new peer-reviewed analyses of extreme weather around the world looking at both historical observations and model simulations to determine whether and by how much climate change might have influenced specific extreme events.
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