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They are not "severe weather events", they are a "new construction enhancements". It has lead to job growth in the construction industry.Those increased severe weather events are great for everyone!
/S
They are not "severe weather events", they are a "new construction enhancements". It has lead to job growth in the construction industry.Those increased severe weather events are great for everyone!
Of course not. Fewer people die when it is warmer. Cold weather kills the particularly vulnerable, children, the sick and the aged.
Explain.There has not been an increase in "severe" weather events.
CDC Climate Change
It is a good thing. Fewer people die in warmer temps than in colder ones.
There has not been an increase in "severe" weather events.
Of course not. Fewer people die when it is warmer. Cold weather kills the particularly vulnerable, children, the sick and the aged.
Apparently the house cleaning by the Donald in not complete. That's just swamp fake news. Trump will fix it by getting rid of those people who put out those fake news reports.CDC Climate Change
Climate change threatens human health and well-being in many ways. Learn what CDC is doing to prevent and adapt to the health effects of climate change.
The environmental consequences of climate change are happening now and are expected to increase in the future. Some of these changes will likely include:
- heat waves,
- heavy precipitation events and flooding,
- droughts,
- more intense hurricanes and storms,
- sea level rise, and
- air pollution.
Climate change, together with other natural and human-made health stressors, influences human health and disease in numerous ways. Some existing health threats will intensify and new health threats will emerge
Which has nothing to do with heat vs cold related deaths.CDC Climate Change
Climate change threatens human health and well-being in many ways. Learn what CDC is doing to prevent and adapt to the health effects of climate change.
The environmental consequences of climate change are happening now and are expected to increase in the future. Some of these changes will likely include:
- heat waves,
- heavy precipitation events and flooding,
- droughts,
- more intense hurricanes and storms,
- sea level rise, and
- air pollution.
Climate change, together with other natural and human-made health stressors, influences human health and disease in numerous ways. Some existing health threats will intensify and new health threats will emerge
It does not do any of those items which you list.I really hope you're kidding about embracing global warming, because if so... egads, that's just stupid.
You do realize what global warming is doing and will do, right? That it leads to flooding, increasingly severe weather patterns and ecosystem failures? It's not worth destroying millions of homes just so that you can wear a lighter jacket in January.
I really hope you're kidding about embracing global warming, because if so... egads, that's just stupid.
You do realize what global warming is doing and will do, right? That it leads to flooding, increasingly severe weather patterns and ecosystem failures? It's not worth destroying millions of homes just so that you can wear a lighter jacket in January.
This is the essentially the second time you've made this claim. Your citation is?It does not do any of those items which you list.
It does not do any of those items which you list.
Of course not. Fewer people die when it is warmer. Cold weather kills the particularly vulnerable, children, the sick and the aged.
https://library.wmo.int/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=15110#.XNHF2ExFzN8https://nca2014.globalchange.gov/highlights/report-findings/extreme-weather
If we ignore heat waves, drought, down pours, flooding then sure there hasn't been an increase.
no they have not.It's doing them right now. People have already debunked your claims in this thread. Restating your false claim with extra emphasis won't change that it's false.
It is a good thing. Fewer people die in warmer temps than in colder ones.
Of course not. Fewer people die when it is warmer. Cold weather kills the particularly vulnerable, children, the sick and the aged.
There has not been an increase in "severe" weather events.
Your underlying assumption that global warming will reduce total deaths because it will reduce cold weather extremes is simply wrong. It will increase global temperatures on average while also increasing temperature extremes.
There will still be both cold and heat waves.
This is just flat out wrong.
Extreme weather events as defined by NOAA have been increasing since the 70’s.
https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/extremes/cei/
It does not do any of those items which you list.
If you weren’t referring to global warming please state what you were referring to as “a good thing” in your post then.That is your assumption not mine. I simply stated what I stated.
looks like they are back to the 1910's level more or less. Wonder what the 1500-1700's would look like?
Nevertheless, it is worth noting the very large increase (more than 2 000 per cent) in the loss of life from heatwaves, particularly during the unprecedented extreme heat events that affected Europe in the summer of 2003 and the Russian Federation in the summer of 2010. On the other hand, there were fewer deaths due to storms and floods in 2001–2010 compared to 1991–2000, with decreases of 16 per cent and 43 per cent, respectively, thanks, in good part, to better early warning systems and increased preparedness.There were fewer deaths, even while exposure to extreme events increased as populations grew and more people were liv-ing in disaster-prone areas. According to the 2011 Global Assessment Report, the average population exposed to flooding every year increased by 114 per cent globally between 1970 and 2010, a period in which the world’s population increased by 87 per cent from 3.7 billion to 6.9 billion. The number of people exposed to severe storms almost tripled in cyclone-prone areas, increasing by 192 per cent, in the same period.
While the average annual temperature is an important climate indicator, the temperatures that people experience can differ greatly from day to day and over the course of a year because of natural climate variability. At the same time, human influence has probably increased the maximum temperatures of the most extreme hot nights and days and the minimum temperatures of cold nights and cold days. It is also more likely than not that human-induced climate change has increased the risk of heatwaves.
US population was 280 million in 1999, currently 330 million. You're telling me 100% of our population growth is due to immigration?
There has not been an increase in "severe" weather events.