Newsletter Mikhail A.M./Flickr John Vidal: There’s no such thing as ‘freak’ weather any more – and 2023 already looks like a disaster movie As Storm Elliott rages and 2022 is declared the UK’s warmest year yet, why are leaders still in denial about extreme weather?
Newslettercommons.wikimedia.org U.S. in for more severe weather as ‘atmospheric river’ arrives The West Coast is bracing for heavy rains and snow as freezing temperatures left a trail of burst pipes across the Southeast.
www.cnn.com Snow continues to pummel western New York as metro Buffalo digs out from up to 6 feet of accumulation
www.cnn.com Snow continues to pummel western New York as metro Buffalo digs out from up to 6 feet of accumulation | CNN
Impacts The polar vortex is coming—and raising the odds for intense winter weather In the stratosphere over Siberia, temperatures recently jumped nearly 100 degrees Fahrenheit, shoving the polar vortex off its North Pole perch.
Impacts www.cbc.ca Climate change might not be to blame for blizzard but expect more 'wild weather,' say scientists Although some climatologists aren't chalking up January's monster blizzard to climate change, they say the province can expect more "wild weather" in the future.
Impacts www.nbcdfw.com Could climate change lead to more extreme hailstorms in Dallas-Fort Worth? From tornadoes to blizzards, when extreme weather happens it's easy to wonder if climate change is to blame.