Archive of Extreme Weather Events Gobally

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,346
9,945
113
Toronto
It should be interesting to see how long and how quickly this list gets. Conversely, it could be proof for the deniers.

OK. Here goes.

Start with the June/2023 fires in Quebec that had all of Toronto told to stay indoors.

July/2023: For 31 straight days — from the last day of June through Sunday, the second-to-last day of July — Phoenix has hit at least 110 degrees Fahrenheit, not merely breaking its 18-day record in 1974, but setting a significant new one.
Warm July breaks dozens of longstanding Australian temperature records | Australia news | The Guardian

August 2023:
Maui wildfires
Yellowstone wildfires
Tropical weather alerts/hurricane Hilary hitting SoCal/Baja
Tenerife wildfire still ‘out of control’ and blazes in Greece force evacuations | Wildfires | The Guardian
Fire in south of France rages though campsite and 500 hectares of land | France | The Guardian
The French environment minister said the climate crisis was exacerbating conditions of drought that fed the fire. No one was injured in the fire, authorities said.
The North Pole was at 1.5ºC.
Chicago roasting in record-setting heat that feels like 120 degrees (nbcnews.com)

Sept/2023
Natural disasters are driving up insurance costs in Canada (thestar.com)
Typhoon Haikui uproots trees and triggers mudslides in Taiwan – video | World news | The Guardian
Extratropical cyclone kills at least 31 in Brazil and leaves over 1,600 homeless | Brazil | The Guardian
Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria hit by fatal flash floods | Turkey | The Guardian
Hong Kong hit by widespread flash flooding after heaviest rainfall since 1884 | CNN
 
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shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,346
9,945
113
Toronto
It should be interesting to see how long and how quickly this list gets. Conversely, it could be proof for the deniers.

OK. Here goes.

Start with the June/2023 fires in Quebec that had all of Toronto told to stay indoors.

July/2023: For 31 straight days — from the last day of June through Sunday, the second-to-last day of July — Phoenix has hit at least 110 degrees Fahrenheit, not merely breaking its 18-day record in 1974, but setting a significant new one.
Warm July breaks dozens of longstanding Australian temperature records | Australia news | The Guardian

August 2023:
Maui wildfires
Yellowstone wildfires
Tropical weather alerts/hurricane Hilary hitting SoCal/Baja
Tenerife wildfire still ‘out of control’ and blazes in Greece force evacuations | Wildfires | The Guardian
Fire in south of France rages though campsite and 500 hectares of land | France | The Guardian
The French environment minister said the climate crisis was exacerbating conditions of drought that fed the fire. No one was injured in the fire, authorities said.
The North Pole was at 1.5ºC.
Chicago roasting in record-setting heat that feels like 120 degrees (nbcnews.com)

Sept/2023
Natural disasters are driving up insurance costs in Canada (thestar.com)
Typhoon Haikui uproots trees and triggers mudslides in Taiwan – video | World news | The Guardian
Extratropical cyclone kills at least 31 in Brazil and leaves over 1,600 homeless | Brazil | The Guardian
Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria hit by fatal flash floods | Turkey | The Guardian
Hong Kong hit by widespread flash flooding after heaviest rainfall since 1884 | CNN
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
13,398
2,040
113
Ghawar
It should be interesting to see how long and how quickly this list gets. Conversely, it could be proof for the deniers.
...........................................
What do such proof mean for non-deniers? How about voting out
Trudeau and his Liberals in the next election? Perhaps voting in the
Green Party of Canada would stand a better chance of bringing down
GHG emission.
 

Ghbff

Well-known member
Nov 24, 2020
639
562
93
What do such proof mean for non-deniers? How about voting out
Trudeau and his Liberals in the next election? Perhaps voting in the
Green Party of Canada would stand a better chance of bringing down
GHG emission.
Why is it that those who can’t even put a sentence together are the ones who deny climate change?
 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,346
9,945
113
Toronto
What do such proof mean for non-deniers? How about voting out
Trudeau and his Liberals in the next election? Perhaps voting in the
Green Party of Canada would stand a better chance of bringing down
GHG emission.
Climate is not the only issue.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
91,095
21,988
113
It should be interesting to see how long and how quickly this list gets. Conversely, it could be proof for the deniers.

OK. Here goes.

Start with the June/2023 fires in Quebec that had all of Toronto told to stay indoors.

July/2023: For 31 straight days — from the last day of June through Sunday, the second-to-last day of July — Phoenix has hit at least 110 degrees Fahrenheit, not merely breaking its 18-day record in 1974, but setting a significant new one.
Warm July breaks dozens of longstanding Australian temperature records | Australia news | The Guardian

August 2023:
Maui wildfires
Yellowstone wildfires
Tropical weather alerts/hurricane Hilary hitting SoCal/Baja
Tenerife wildfire still ‘out of control’ and blazes in Greece force evacuations | Wildfires | The Guardian
Fire in south of France rages though campsite and 500 hectares of land | France | The Guardian
The French environment minister said the climate crisis was exacerbating conditions of drought that fed the fire. No one was injured in the fire, authorities said.
The North Pole was at 1.5ºC.
Chicago roasting in record-setting heat that feels like 120 degrees (nbcnews.com)

Sept/2023
Natural disasters are driving up insurance costs in Canada (thestar.com)
Typhoon Haikui uproots trees and triggers mudslides in Taiwan – video | World news | The Guardian
Extratropical cyclone kills at least 31 in Brazil and leaves over 1,600 homeless | Brazil | The Guardian
Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria hit by fatal flash floods | Turkey | The Guardian
Hong Kong hit by widespread flash flooding after heaviest rainfall since 1884 | CNN
Warmer air can hold more moisture.
Now we are seeing these massive, massive rain storms.

Greece got 2x their annual rainfall in one day.
21 inches of rain

That could happen anywhere now.

If you check the maps the jet stream did what they call an 'omega' pattern, with massive flooding in France and Greece while there was a heat wave in the rest of Europe.
That kind of pattern is what we get with 1.2ºC warming.
How bad will it get at 1.5º or 2º?

 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,346
9,945
113
Toronto
bump:

It should be interesting to see how long and how quickly this list gets. Conversely, it could be proof for the deniers.

OK. Here goes.

Start with the June/2023 fires in Quebec that had all of Toronto told to stay indoors.

July/2023: For 31 straight days — from the last day of June through Sunday, the second-to-last day of July — Phoenix has hit at least 110 degrees Fahrenheit, not merely breaking its 18-day record in 1974, but setting a significant new one.
Warm July breaks dozens of longstanding Australian temperature records | Australia news | The Guardian

August 2023:
Maui wildfires
Yellowstone wildfires
Tropical weather alerts/hurricane Hilary hitting SoCal/Baja
Tenerife wildfire still ‘out of control’ and blazes in Greece force evacuations | Wildfires | The Guardian
Fire in south of France rages though campsite and 500 hectares of land | France | The Guardian
The French environment minister said the climate crisis was exacerbating conditions of drought that fed the fire. No one was injured in the fire, authorities said.
The North Pole was at 1.5ºC.
Chicago roasting in record-setting heat that feels like 120 degrees (nbcnews.com)

Sept/2023
Natural disasters are driving up insurance costs in Canada (thestar.com)
Typhoon Haikui uproots trees and triggers mudslides in Taiwan – video | World news | The Guardian
Extratropical cyclone kills at least 31 in Brazil and leaves over 1,600 homeless | Brazil | The Guardian
Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria hit by fatal flash floods | Turkey | The Guardian
Hong Kong hit by widespread flash flooding after heaviest rainfall since 1884 | CNN
‘Towns were erased’: Libyan reporters on the ‘horrifying, harrowing’ aftermath of floods | Global development | The Guardian
Most Americans experienced record heat this summer: ‘It’s just daily life now’ | Extreme weather | The Guardian

THIS IS JUST 6 WEEKS SO FAR. (Not counting July) 15 incidents.

Who wants to tell us that this is just normal? There is no climate change.
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
13,398
2,040
113
Ghawar
..........................
Who wants to tell us that this is just normal? There is no climate change.
There is a place and time for everything. IMO the right place and
time to challenge people with your question is at the gas pump
when people are filling up. I propose gas stations making a voice
recording of the question triggered every time a gas payment is made.

Having your archive updated in real time on a display at a
gas station above the daily gas prices display could also
be one way to raise awareness of the horrible consequence
of driving further.

 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,346
9,945
113
Toronto
bump:

It should be interesting to see how long and how quickly this list gets. Conversely, it could be proof for the deniers.

OK. Here goes.

Start with the June/2023 fires in Quebec that had all of Toronto told to stay indoors.

July/2023: For 31 straight days — from the last day of June through Sunday, the second-to-last day of July — Phoenix has hit at least 110 degrees Fahrenheit, not merely breaking its 18-day record in 1974, but setting a significant new one.
Warm July breaks dozens of longstanding Australian temperature records | Australia news | The Guardian

August 2023:
Maui wildfires
Yellowstone wildfires
Tropical weather alerts/hurricane Hilary hitting SoCal/Baja
Tenerife wildfire still ‘out of control’ and blazes in Greece force evacuations | Wildfires | The Guardian
Fire in south of France rages though campsite and 500 hectares of land | France | The Guardian
The French environment minister said the climate crisis was exacerbating conditions of drought that fed the fire. No one was injured in the fire, authorities said.
The North Pole was at 1.5ºC.
Chicago roasting in record-setting heat that feels like 120 degrees (nbcnews.com)

Sept/2023
Natural disasters are driving up insurance costs in Canada (thestar.com)
Typhoon Haikui uproots trees and triggers mudslides in Taiwan – video | World news | The Guardian
Extratropical cyclone kills at least 31 in Brazil and leaves over 1,600 homeless | Brazil | The Guardian
Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria hit by fatal flash floods | Turkey | The Guardian
Hong Kong hit by widespread flash flooding after heaviest rainfall since 1884 | CNN
‘Towns were erased’: Libyan reporters on the ‘horrifying, harrowing’ aftermath of floods | Global development | The Guardian
Most Americans experienced record heat this summer: ‘It’s just daily life now’ | Extreme weather |
The Guardian
Weather tracker: Australia bakes in spring heatwave while US hit by 14 storms | Extreme weather | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/environ...g-heatwave-while-us-hit-by-14-storms#comments
The spring heatwave in Australia is set to continue this week, with record temperatures expected for inland areas of South Australia, New South Wales and Victoria. In Sydney, temperatures have already reached 34.2C, which is more than 12C higher than the September average. The Bureau of Meteorology anticipates that temperatures will continue to rise significantly on Monday and Tuesday, with temperatures possibly reaching as high as 16C above the seasonal average.
The world just sweltered through its hottest August on record | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noaa.gov)
 
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shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,346
9,945
113
Toronto
bump:

It should be interesting to see how long and how quickly this list gets. Conversely, it could be proof for the deniers.

OK. Here goes.

Start with the June/2023 fires in Quebec that had all of Toronto told to stay indoors.

July/2023: For 31 straight days — from the last day of June through Sunday, the second-to-last day of July — Phoenix has hit at least 110 degrees Fahrenheit, not merely breaking its 18-day record in 1974, but setting a significant new one.
Warm July breaks dozens of longstanding Australian temperature records | Australia news | The Guardian

August 2023:
Maui wildfires
Yellowstone wildfires
Tropical weather alerts/hurricane Hilary hitting SoCal/Baja
Tenerife wildfire still ‘out of control’ and blazes in Greece force evacuations | Wildfires | The Guardian
Fire in south of France rages though campsite and 500 hectares of land | France | The Guardian
The French environment minister said the climate crisis was exacerbating conditions of drought that fed the fire. No one was injured in the fire, authorities said.
The North Pole was at 1.5ºC.
Chicago roasting in record-setting heat that feels like 120 degrees (nbcnews.com)

Sept/2023
Natural disasters are driving up insurance costs in Canada (thestar.com)
Typhoon Haikui uproots trees and triggers mudslides in Taiwan – video | World news | The Guardian
Extratropical cyclone kills at least 31 in Brazil and leaves over 1,600 homeless | Brazil | The Guardian
Turkey, Greece and Bulgaria hit by fatal flash floods | Turkey | The Guardian
Hong Kong hit by widespread flash flooding after heaviest rainfall since 1884 | CNN
‘Towns were erased’: Libyan reporters on the ‘horrifying, harrowing’ aftermath of floods | Global development | The Guardian
Most Americans experienced record heat this summer: ‘It’s just daily life now’ | Extreme weather |
The Guardian
Weather tracker: Australia bakes in spring heatwave while US hit by 14 storms | Extreme weather | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/environ...g-heatwave-while-us-hit-by-14-storms#comments
The spring heatwave in Australia is set to continue this week, with record temperatures expected for inland areas of South Australia, New South Wales and Victoria. In Sydney, temperatures have already reached 34.2C, which is more than 12C higher than the September average. The Bureau of Meteorology anticipates that temperatures will continue to rise significantly on Monday and Tuesday, with temperatures possibly reaching as high as 16C above the seasonal average.
The world just sweltered through its hottest August on record | National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noaa.gov)
Heat-related deaths in 2022 hit highest level on record in England | Extreme weather | The Guardian
Europe’s olive oil supply running out after drought – and the odd hailstorm | Extreme weather | The Guardian
New York declares state of emergency amid heavy rainfall and flash flooding | New York | The Guardian
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
13,398
2,040
113
Ghawar
It should be interesting to see how long and how quickly this list gets. Conversely, it could be proof for the deniers.
.............
Growing list of climate disasters and climate change proof won't likely
effect meaningful change of behavior of deniers and non-deniers who already
got used to it. Both will continue driving and flying with little restraint. You
may stand a slim chance of making a difference by showing your proof and list
to leaders in power who've long accepted climate change and declared plans
to reach net zero emission.

 
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shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
51,346
9,945
113
Toronto
Growing list of climate disasters and climate change proof won't likely
effect meaningful change of behavior of deniers and non-deniers who already
got used to it.
I'm stating facts/recorded events of current weather extremes.

Do you take issue with the events recorded? Are they bogus?
 

oil&gas

Well-known member
Apr 16, 2002
13,398
2,040
113
Ghawar
I'm stating facts/recorded events of current weather extremes.

Do you take issue with the events recorded? Are they bogus?

I grew up in the 1970's in a region where getting hit by
natural disasters were a part of life. Do you know how
much easier people got killed by hurricanes and monsoons in
the Philippines, India and Bangladesh back then? These disasters
were reported but not sensationalized as they are in the news today.

I would applaud your effort if people actually heed
the climate warning implicated in your list. I would be
glad to see people finally moving on to reduce their
carbon footprint even though I know the prediction
of climate catastrophe awaiting us is BS. I do understand
it is good for the world if individuals finally begin taking
the urgency to decarbonize their daily routines seriously
even if they are doing it for the wrong reason.
 
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Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts