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Extreme rainfall to become three times more common by the end of the century, Met Office says
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Record-breaking rain more likely due to climate change
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Met Office
Author: Press Office
Climate change will affect how European countries experience summer.
A new study projects that summers across the continent will become drier for most of Europe through the century. Furthermore, human induced climate change is expected to increase the frequency of extremely dry conditions across all of Europe.
Dr Nikos Christidis and Professor Peter Stott of the Met Office Hadley Centre assessed how human-induced climate change has influenced the trend of wet and dry summers in Europe and looked at water availability and rainfall across north and south Europe by the end of the century.
The study analysed not only summer trends and extreme events through modelling rainfall changes, but also considers the effect of temperature warming via changes in evapotranspiration, following SSP2 4.5, a medium emission scenario. Published in Science Bulletin, the results provide insight as to how communities will need to adapt as they prepare to see deficits
SunStar January 28, 2021 IT SEEMS the lockdowns in 2020 were not enough to slow the Earth s warming. The reduced greenhouse gas emissions hardly made a dent. The year 2020 tied with 2016 as the warmest year on record, according to the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) of the US National Aeronautical Space Administration (NASA). Last year s globally averaged temperature was 1.02 Degrees Celsius warmer than the baseline 1951-1980 mean. NASA s analysis incorporates surface temperature measurements from more than 26,000 weather stations and thousands of ship- and buoy-based observations of sea surface temperatures.
The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) also said that the year 2020 was one of the three warmest on record and rivaled 2016 for the top spot. The WMO uses datasets developed and maintained by the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA s GISS, and the United Kingdom s Met Office Hadley Centre and the University of East
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