@peeppeepcircus One point that is constantly being mentioned with regards to climate change is: extremes will become worse. When it rains, it will pour. Hurricanes will come with more force, stay around longer, wetter. Droughts will be exacerbated. Humidity will get worse to the point of it being deadly... https://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/measuring-climate-change-s-not-just-heat-s-humidity-rcna14351
@Alt_Human here’s another article about #climatechange and #jetstream
@Victor @peeppeepcircus One of the researchers at my university (unfortunately passed away) looked at local rainfall patterns over the last 30 or so years. Same amount of rain annually, but it's coming in bursts more often now. More rain in shorter periods of time, followed by longer dry periods. Stressing out the local stormwater processing in a big way, even though the total amount of water is the same.
@Victor @peeppeepcircus
Add long range predictions of more water in the system in New England and we are in deep doodoo (literally - our local water treatment systems will fail!)
@bioscilibrarian @peeppeepcircus Current infrastructure is not made to deal with climatic changes to deal with extreme rainfall events, drought, and other weather extremes. Yes, things are being looked and changes will slowly start being integrated into utilities' management plans. I can say this from my perspective in the water and wastewater industry. Bureaucracy and politics slow down the process.
@Victor I remember reading this:
SEPTEMBER 16, 2022
Simulations show increased jet stream waviness due to asymmetric rise in global temperatures
Over the past several years, the jet stream has become wavier than it used to be. Both peaks and valleys have become more extreme. This has led to changes in weather patterns—some places have grown wetter and some drier, and there have also been more extended hot and cold spells around the globe.
#climatechange #jetstream
https://phys.org/news/2022-09-simulations-jet-stream-waviness-due.html