Lyndhurst 14
Well-known member
- Jan 16, 2008
- 5,241
It's all starting to feel a bit like that movie "Don't Look Up!"
Mass hysteria. A couple of days of hot weather and the country goes mad. A bit similar to our reaction to a dusting of snow. Madness.
It would seem perhaps the media weren't being quite so hysterical, after all.
Ummmm, a difficult one, who to believe:
a) Scientists with super computers from different meteorological groups; or
b) Climate change deniers and/or those who don’t give a toss if others suffer?
Clearly not NSC...
...who knew!
“It’s just summer, enjoy the sun” latest
[tweet]1549393560193142784[/tweet]
I’ve stayed away from this thread for many reasons, but working in the sector I do ... I can tell you all that by 2080 vast swathes of the south east will be a scorched desert littered with the sun bleached bones of climate change deniers ...
The end is nigh.
Well, of the world as we know it.
One off my arse.
All of this, all of it mark me, is an absolute tragedy.
This aged well.
Indeed, I do hope those who mocked the situation, (#it's summer), those who laughed and said it doesn't happen abroad, be it France, USA, Greece, Germany have the decency to recognise how pathetic and offensive their comments are.
Climate change is a fact over the geological life of our planet. Our (human) actions in warming the planet since the industrial revolution is a key factor in speeding a climate change event
The UK's record temperature has been broken again after the mercury reached 40.3C in Coningsby in Lincolnshire, according to the Met Office.
The provisional figure, as of 16:00 today, surpasses the earlier peak of 40.2C recorded at Heathrow.
Temperatures are still at that same high this afternoon at the London airport, as well as in St James's Park in the capital.
Kew Gardens was 40.1C as of 16:00, with Northolt at 40C and Cambridge at 39.9C.
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I’ve recently been involved with climate change modelling, via certain projects I’m delivering, and the 2050 models are already looking outdated - these take into account expected climate change trajectory... ultimately we should be looking to plant olive groves in the Simonside hills and producing wine in north Northumberland ... except, of course, we won’t be able to due to mass migration (to escape inhospitable regions) and land pressure created in part by our bloated and out of control population.
Whichever way you slice it we’re ****ed.
And people are still arguing about tax and bloody voodoo economics... Jesus wept.
I’ve recently been involved with climate change modelling, via certain projects I’m delivering, and the 2050 models are already looking outdated - these take into account expected climate change trajectory... ultimately we should be looking to plant olive groves in the Simonside hills and producing wine in north Northumberland ... except, of course, we won’t be able to due to mass migration (to escape inhospitable regions) and land pressure created in part by our bloated and out of control population.
Whichever way you slice it we’re ****ed.
And people are still arguing about tax and bloody voodoo economics... Jesus wept.