Extreme Weather Events
Long before we experience protracted, detectable heat waves from global warming, we experience the effects of a more unstable climate -- altered drought and rainfall patterns, more intense storms, more temperature extremes, unseasonal weather events and more intense and severe downpours.
Extreme Weather Profile: July -- Dec. 2008
Extreme weather Profile: Jan. -- June, 2008
Extreme weather Profile: July -- December, 2007
Extreme Weather Profile: January -- June, 2007
Extreme Weather Profile: July - December, 2006
Extreme Weather Profile: January - June, 2006
WMO: 2005 Saw New Level of Weather Extremes (Dec. 2005)
(Special package of material about Hurricanes Katrina and Rita)
Extreme Weather Profile: July - December, 2005
Extreme Weather Profile: January - June, 2005
Extreme Weather Profile: January - June, 2004
Extreme Weather Profile: July - December, 2004
Current forecast: More Extreme Weather
For current conditions, see: www.321weather.com
Findings published in the journal Science in September, 2000, reinforced previous projections of increasingly destructive weather as climate change progresses.
That study follows two previous studies by Karl et al. which had established the connection between greenhouse warming and extreme weather events: "Trends in U.S. Climate during the Twentieth Century", Consequences, Spring, 1995, Vol. 1, No. 1, Thomas Karl et al. Also: "The Coming Climate," by Thomas R. Karl, Neville Nicholls and Jonathan Gregory, Scientific American, May, 1997.
A 2003 report by the World Water Council noted a steady increase in extreme weather events over the past 40 years -- with "major flood disasters" rising from 7 in the 1970s, to 18 in the 1980s to 26 in the 1990s.