Author Topic: Extreme Weather Assessment by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN IPCC)  (Read 291 times)

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Offline rangerrebew

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Extreme Weather Assessment by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN IPCC)

The following chart and definitions is from Chapter 12 of the UN IPCC Sixth Assessment Report, Page 90 of Chapter 12 Climate Change Information for Regional Impact and for Risk Assessment.  It essentially charts the UN IPCC’s assessment of the odds that each type of extreme weather is due to climate change.

As can be seen from the chart, there is no evidence of any increase or decrease, globally or by region, in the frequency, severity or extent of frost, mean precipitation, river floods, heavy precipitation and pluvial floods, landslides, aridity, hydrological drought, agricultural or ecological drought, fire weather or wildfires, mean wind speed, severe wind storms or tornados, tropical cyclones or hurricanes, sand and dust storms, snow glacial or ice sheets, heavy snowfall and ice storms, hail, snow avalanche, relative sea levels, coastal floods, coastal erosion, marine heatwaves, ocean acidity, air pollution weather or radiation at earth’s surface.

Academics, scientist, the media or politicians who say otherwise are contradicted by the institution most identified with promoting catastrophic global warming, that is the United Nation’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the IPCC.

The last and second to last columns in the chart below are model predictions of what will happen greater than 25 years from now and only based on the most extreme forecasts of CO2 emissions, that the IPCC and virtually all climate scientists now consider impossible levels of CO2 emissions.

https://wattsupwiththat.com/ipcc-attributions-climate-and-extreme-weather/
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