You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
U.S. Midwest Freezes, Australia Burns: This Is the Age of Weather Extremes
2019-02-03
[NYT] In Chicago, officials warned about the risk of almost instant frostbite on what could be the city’s coldest day ever. Warming centers opened around the Midwest. And schools and universities closed throughout the region as rare polar winds streamed down from the Arctic.

At the same time, on the other side of the planet, wildfires raged in Australia’s record-breaking heat. Soaring air-conditioner use overloaded electrical grids and caused widespread power failures. The authorities slowed and canceled trams to save power. Labor leaders called for laws that would require businesses to close when temperatures reached hazardous levels: nearly 116 degrees Fahrenheit, or 47 Celsius, as was the case last week in Adelaide, the capital of South Australia.

This is weather in the age of extremes. It comes on top of multiple extremes, all kinds, in all kinds of places.

"When something happens ‐ whether it’s a cold snap, a wildfire, a hurricane, any of those things ‐ we need to think beyond what we have seen in the past and assume there’s a high probability that it will be worse than anything we’ve ever seen," said Crystal A. Kolden, an associate professor at the University of Idaho, who specializes in wildfires and who is currently working in Tasmania during one of the state’s worst fire seasons.

Consider these recent examples: Heat records were toppled from Norway to Algeria last year. In parts of Australia, a drought has gone on so long that a child in kindergarten will hardly have seen rain in her lifetime. And California saw its most ruinous wildfires ever in 2018, triggering a bankruptcy filing this week by the state’s largest utility, Pacific Gas and Electric.
Posted by:Besoeker

#5  could be the city’s coldest day ever.

But it wasn't. The coldest day ever, and I was there, was reported (at the time) as -29 with a wind chill of minus seventy-five. Late January, 1985, well before the birth of most 'journalists'.

The train was two minutes late, so I got to work at 8:02. I did pay $0.45 for the bus, instead of walking from the train station to the office. But we didn't have man-made global climate change then.
Posted by: Bobby   2019-02-03 11:41  

#4  Circa 2059 - "The geoengineering project to equalize the Earth's seasons by eliminating the tilt of the planets axis was hailed a major success just a few short years ago. But now that the Earth is orbiting closer to the Sun each year, scientists are re-evaluating..."
Posted by: M. Murcek   2019-02-03 08:49  

#3  Just bring the hot Australian summer to the US Midwest - problem solved!
Posted by: Raj   2019-02-03 08:42  

#2  A hemisphere, an equator, an ecliptic, and a little tilt to an axis. None of which is covered in Journalism school (or most of the 'scientific' community it seems).
Posted by: Procopius2k   2019-02-03 07:58  

#1  US: Winter, Australia: Summer.
There must be a connection somehow.
Posted by: Sheng Trotsky3676   2019-02-03 07:29  

00:00