Archive for February, 2011

‘Substantial’ increase in heavy rainstorms proof of human-caused climate change: UVic study

Vancouver Sun: Large trees lie toppled in front of a St. John's home last fall after tropical storm Igor blew through Newfoundland. The planet has seen plenty of such extreme precipitation events recently -- from last summer’s devastating flood in Pakistan to snowstorms that have buried many parts of the U.S. this winter. Although scientists say it is not yet known if the probability of these specific events was increased by greenhouse gases, according to new research, gases generated by human activity have intensified...

Extreme weather getting worse – and climate change to blame, studies say

Associated Press: Extreme rainstorms and snowfalls have grown substantially stronger, two studies suggest, with scientists for the first time finding the telltale fingerprints of man-made global warming on downpours that often cause deadly flooding. Two studies in Wednesday's issue of the journal Nature link heavy rains to increases in greenhouse gases more than ever before. s raining ice shards in Mississippi One group of researchers looked at the strongest rain and snow events of each year from 1951 to 1999...

Floods linked to manmade climate change: studies

Baltimore Sun: Man-made greenhouse gas emissions are linked to more frequent heavy rainfall, two studies published found on Wednesday, portraying a clearer human fingerprint after a spate of floods around the world. Scientists agree that greenhouse gas emissions are warming the world and expect that in turn would lead in the future to more evaporation of water, more moist air and heavier rainfall. Available now -- get the new Baltimore Sun Android app! But the two new papers were the first to pin an increase...

Floods linked to manmade climate change: studies

Reuters: Man-made greenhouse gas emissions are linked to more frequent heavy rainfall, two studies published found on Wednesday, portraying a clearer human fingerprint after a spate of floods around the world. Scientists agree that greenhouse gas emissions are warming the world and expect that in turn would lead in the future to more evaporation of water, more moist air and heavier rainfall. But the two new papers were the first to pin an increase in heavy rainfall in the second half of the last century...

VIDEO: Climate change ‘increases flood risk’

BBC: Greenhouse gas emissions are making extreme rainfall events more common, scientists say and in the UK, have increased the risk of flooding. That autumn saw the highest rains in England and Wales since records began in 1766.

New York City Can Buy More Watershed Land, State Says

New York Times: New York City can continue to buy land to protect its watershed in the Catskills and Hudson River Valley from development under an agreement announced on Wednesday by the city and state. Officials with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and the city’s Environmental Protection Department said the state had issued a permit under the agreement that allows New York City to continue the land acquisition program for the next 15 years. The land and watershed-protection effort,...

United Kingdom: Study: Climate change linked to extreme rain

Associated Press: John Fogerty once crooned "Who'll stop the rain?" Not humanity, apparently, as new research shows that human-caused climate change has significantly increased the chances of extreme rain- and snowfall around the world, along with the deadly floods that follow. This is according to two new studies published Wednesday in the British journal Nature. While other studies have suggested that global warming may be partly responsible for an increase in heavy precipitation, what's new in this study...

Blame human emissions for British floods

New Scientist: Al Gore famously had his knuckles rapped for implying that human-induced climate change had caused hurricane Katrina. The scientific party line then was "No single weather event can be attributed to climate change". It's a line that has held strong but is beginning to fray. This week, a study has shown that the devastating floods which damaged nearly 10,000 properties in England and Wales in 2000, and cost £1.3 billion in insurance losses, were made significantly more...

Increased flooding driven by climate change: study

Agence France -Presse: Global warming driven by human activity boosted the intensity of rain, snow and consequent flooding in the northern hemisphere over the last half of the 20th century, research released Wednesday has shown. Two studies, both published in Nature, are among the first to draw a straight line between climate change and its impact on potentially deadly and damaging extreme weather events. Australia, Sri Lanka, Brazil and Pakistan have all been recently ravaged by massive flooding, raising questions...

Bill McKibben: Climate Change Is Our Most Urgent Challenge

Nation: Bill McKibben, author and founder of the international environmental organization 350.org, says that without a global campaign to curb climate change, the ecological devastation of our warming climate will make our planet uninhabitable. His appeal to citizens and policy-makers, the sixth video in the series "Peak Oil and a Changing Climate" from The Nation and On The Earth Productions, is a call to action as much as it is a sobering account of the damage we're already doing to our environment. It's...