The Climate Change Thread

Is rapid climate change man made?

  • Yes, but not completely sure

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  • Don't know

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  • No, but not completely sure

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  • Other (explain)

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  • Total voters
    16

live627

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I'm confident that they will figure this out; airplanes technology will adapt. Example: fighter jets. Since those always go above mach 1 speeds and create a sonic boom, they probably encounter constant turbulence.
 

Retro

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This was inevitably going to happen as our planet continues to warm. Incredibly, other than mentioning the percentage of UK homes with aircon, this study doesn't actually mention it anywhere else, other than a footnote. Incredible, as aircon is central to keeping a home cool, especially one not designed with heatwaves in mind, which is most of them since the UK was a colder country before, so keeping warm was the problem.

Lower-income householders, minority ethnic people and those with young children are more likely to live in homes at risk from dangerous overheating, research has found.

The UK has baked in multiple heatwaves this summer, with many people sweltering in dangerously hot homes that were not designed to withstand extreme temperatures. June was the hottest on record and in general this summer England was an average of 1.58C above average temperatures.

Hot homes are dangerous for health; cardiovascular and respiratory issues, sleep disturbance, mental health problems and heat exhaustion all correlate with high temperatures in the home. Health risks spike when temperatures inside are above 25C, and there is a link between overheating homes and the risk of death, particularly for elderly people.

An analysis of housing stock by the Resolution Foundation has found nearly half (48%) of the poorest fifth of English households have homes liable to get too hot – three times as many as among the richest fifth (17%).

 

Astro What

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Incredible, as aircon is central to keeping a home cool, especially one not designed with heatwaves in mind, which is most of them since the UK was a colder country before, so keeping warm was the problem.
It's all in what you get used to. Here in Texas there are still many homes that do not have AC, and that is in an area that averages 96° (36°C) to low 100's (38°C+) in the summer. You learn to make do with fans in the rooms (ceiling and also floor) along with consumption of ice water.
At 63, I was out mowing the back 3/4 acre with a push mower when the temp was 97° the other day and the "feels like" temp was 103° and we had a hot weather advisory out.
 

Astro What

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Sounds like a sweltering nightmare.
It's just part of Texas and actually living in much of the deep south. Texas and Louisiana are probably the worst due to the humidity levels with the heat in much of the both states. At least if the humidity level is low you can use evaporative cooling that works really well. That doesn't work well when the air is already saturated with water vapor.
Texas, Louisiana and Florida are considered the hotter of the southern states. The benefit for Texas is due to our size, we do have some areas that are more arid even though they may get hot.
 

AllThingsTech

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@Astro What thanks for clarifying this, as I was considering purchasing an evaporative water cooler but from my experience effectiveness varies. It’s great to now understand why 👍
 

Retro

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In a blow to us climate change affirmists, it turns out that the melting of arctic sea ice has dramatically slowed down in the last 20 years despite ever more CO2 being pumped into the air by the burning of fossil fuels. However, scientists aren't phased by this, stating that it's just a blip and that melting will resume soon.

The melting of sea ice in the Arctic has slowed dramatically in the past 20 years, scientists have reported, with no statistically significant decline in its extent since 2005.

The finding is surprising, the researchers say, given that carbon emissions from fossil fuel burning have continued to rise and trap ever more heat over that time.

They said natural variations in ocean currents that limit ice melting had probably balanced out the continuing rise in global temperatures. However, they said this was only a temporary reprieve and melting was highly likely to start again at about double the long-term rate at some point in the next five to 10 years.

Of course, this will be seized upon by climate change denialists and the fossil fuel industry to continue pumping out ever more CO2 in the atmosphere and triggering catastrophic rises in temperature which the world is already heading for, making it so much worse, likely making significant parts of the planet uninhabitable, especially around the equator which is always the hottest. Future generations are gonna have it rough, much more than we have it today and it's already measurably worse than just a couple of decades ago.

 
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