Extraordinary photos of July's extreme weather - BBC News
Extraordinary photos of July's extreme weather - BBC News
It is a summer of extremes. Burning temperatures followed by raging fires. Wild storms and torrential rain. And a run of broken climate records.
It is a summer of extremes. Burning temperatures followed by raging fires. Wild storms and torrential rain. And a run of broken climate records.
This is morbidly fascinating. Also extremely good pictures.
e: While all of the photos are great, this one struck me in particular:
22ReplyThe fact that megafires are here to stay and probably worsen with every year makes that 1.5c almost impossible due the amount of CO2 it releases.
20ReplyMegafires has always been there in that part of Europe, simply no one cared. Now they are spreading further north...
5ReplyData doesn't seem to agree with your comment:
https://effis.jrc.ec.europa.eu/apps/effis.statistics/seasonaltrend
https://joint-research-centre.ec.europa.eu/jrc-news-and-updates/eu-2022-wildfire-season-was-second-worst-record-2023-05-02_en&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwiogPzYy7SAAxVuRaQEHfi1A9UQFnoECAoQAg&usg=AOvVaw2dtUqW-wDxvDME-k1J3lm8
https://atmosphere.copernicus.eu/europes-summer-wildfire-emissions-highest-15-years&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwiogPzYy7SAAxVuRaQEHfi1A9UQFnoECAUQAg&usg=AOvVaw1-utHxqQCn2po8n89UFOlmIf you mean that there were summer fires before the 20th century, sure, but that's like comparing a kiddie's pool to a lake.
2Reply
Heartbreaking
10ReplyWe reap what we sow.
6ReplyI'd argue that a lot of people are reaping what a much smaller number people have sown. Not to say that we all don't hold some blame in some part, but some are significantly more to blame than others. An emissions per capita map overlaid with a projected impact from climate change map explains it well.
10Reply
This post brings such a powerful message.
6Reply"Global boiling" 😬
3Reply