Flicks Of Climate Change Seen In 24 Strange Weather Evolving Instances
Climate change has been turned into a matter of vulnerable importance all around. Recently it has been revealed in a study that climate change has worked as the stimulative force in various strange weather behavior seen in major parts of the world. The study was generated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
According to CBS News, NOAA revealed in the study that climate change was a striking factor in 24 of 30 strange weather events, however, stipulating large or small effects. They include eleven instances of high heat, as well as unusual certain winter sunshine in the United Kingdom, Alaskan wildfires and odd "sunny day" flooding in Miami.
The American Meteorological Society published the said report in their bulletin. The climate change affected weather in Alaska, Canada, Washington state, the southeastern United States, Europe, Australia, Japan, China, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, the western north Pacific cyclone region, India, Pakistan, Egypt, Ethiopia and southern Africa. The report even boosted the flooding effect seen in Miami in September 2015.
As per San Francisco Chronicles, the report also found that there is an increasing slant of tropical cyclone activity in the western Pacific region. This incline of stormy weather in the area is partly because of climate change. Another responsible fact behind this abnormal situation is El Niño, the now-gone natural weather phenomenon. Though, precisely in six instances including cold snaps in the United States and downpours in Nigeria and India, the scientists were not able detect climate change's effects. Other scientists, though, disputed that finding for the cold snap that hit the Northeast.
NOAA's very own senior executive Hoerling further stated that the research found a connection between the shrinking ice and the polar vortex but didn't see one causing the other. The findings denoted all over effect and the future of Antarctica and its associating regions as well.
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