|
T
|
he worst predicted
impacts of climate change are starting to happen — and much faster than climate
scientists expected, according to Rolling
Stone magazine.
The magazine said: “Historians may look to 2015 as the year
when shit really started hitting the fan. Some snapshots: In just the past few
months, record-setting heat waves in Pakistan and India each killed more than
1,000 people. In Washington State's Olympic National Park, the rainforest
caught fire for the first time in living memory. London reached 98 degrees
Fahrenheit during the hottest July day ever recorded in the U.K.; The Guardian
briefly had to pause its live blog of the heat wave because its computer
servers overheated. In California, suffering from its worst drought in a
millennium, a 50-acre brush fire swelled seventyfold in a matter of hours,
jumping across the I-15 freeway during rush-hour traffic. Then, a few days
later, the region was pounded by intense, virtually unheard-of summer rains. Puerto
Rico is under its strictest water rationing in history as a monster El Niño
forms in the tropical Pacific Ocean, shifting weather patterns worldwide.”
Read the Rolling Stone
story by Eric Holthaus - “The Point of No Return: Climate Change Nightmares Are Already Here”.
No comments:
Post a Comment