If you get the feeling that heavy downpours are more intense than they used to be, you’re not imagining it. According to the National Climate Assessment, the most extreme precipitation events (those in the 99th percentile of intensity) have increased in every region of the contiguous states since the 1950s. As the map above shows, the rise in intensity has been greatest in the Northeast and least in the Southwest — and in all cases, climate scientists believe, the reason is simple: in a world warmed by heat-trapping greenhouse gases, there’s more evaporation, and the atmosphere can hold on to more water. And when that water vapor condenses as rain or snow, there’s more of it.
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Amusing. A report put together by a group climate change alarmists that attempts to blame every weather event on global warming.
Sadly this disagrees with reports from NOAA (which I posted a link to), NASA, and the British Met which state that weather events in the past 5 years have NOTHING to do with climate change.
Who are you going to believe - a fringe organization of alarmists, or the mainstream respected organizations?
You are an idiot.
So you don't believe the recent reports from NOAA, NASA, and the British Met that recent extreme weather has nothing to do with climate change?
Good to know.
Should I post links to all of the reports again? Maybe this time you will read them.
GWB....From your "NOAA report" which BTW is not a NOAA report.
with 22 studies
looking at 16 events, a few interesting patterns emerge.
Examining Table 24.1 reveals that the nine analyses
of extreme heat events overwhelmingly showed that
human-caused climate change is having an influence.
In some cases, events have become as much as 10
times more likely due to the current cumulative
effects of human-induced climate change, as found
for the Korean heat wave of summer 2013. These
individual examples are consistent with the broader
trends captured in the latest IPCC (Stocker et al. 2014)
statement, “it is likely that the frequency of heat waves
has increased in large parts of Europe, Asia and Australia.”
At the other end of the temperature distribution,
the one analysis of a cold event found that such
events were becoming much less likely.
So, not only can't you read, or know the source, but you just assume that what you read on Forbes will be right.
Like I said before, you are right wing sheep. bah bah
Why don't you post from the summary of the report. You know the part that states that weather events 2013 were conclusively not caused by "climate change" - instead of quoting information out of one of the papers it referenced but rejected.