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by fromthestart
2456 days ago
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> The net result is you are seeing once in 1500 year floods happening every year. This is the same kind of cherry picking that denialists have been using for decades. Locally rare events appear frequent if you gather trials from enough localities. The fact is that there has been no increase in storm intensity or frequency over the last 100 years which correlates with greenhouse emissions. There was an increase starting in the 1980s [1] but this is simply not enough data for climate prediction, which normally changes on scales of hundreds of years at the quickest - even if you assume that we are expecting catastrophic temperature increase over the span of a century. Its worrisome that proponent hysteria is driven by the same kind of fallacious reasoning as that of denialist. 1. https://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/historical-atlantic-hurricane-and-... |
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Overall this isn't rocket science. You have warmer temperatures over the ocean, which yields more water in the air to get caught up in passing hurricanes. The net result is more rainfall when it hits land. It is what it is.
[1] https://w2.weather.gov/climate/getclimate.php?date=&wfo=lix&...
[2] https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/11/climate/hurricane-tropica...