The 12-month moving average of global mean temperatures has now moved slightly above 1.6 °C (2.9 °F).

#ClimateChange #globalwarming #temperature #climate

@RARohde
das wird ein hammerschöner Sommer, wie er es früher niemals war.
Die Kinder sollen es ja schließlich mal besser haben!
Und warm baden!
@RARohde we're still not extinct

@richardtol @RARohde I wonder if anyone has worked out what the extinction curve would look like. I'm told by experts that hurricane damage goes up with the third power of wind speed, though overall the numbers decrease. So we can adapt at the moment, but there will be a time when adaption becomes difficult and deaths will skyrocket. Maybe not to the point of extinction, but that is a poor target.

I'm still pretty confident that we'll stop emissions long before then, so we'll never have to find out.

The climate niche of Homo Sapiens

I propose the Dominicy-Hill-Worton estimator to estimate the current climate niche of Homo Sapiens and our croplands. I use this to extrapolate the degree of unprecedentedness of future climates. Wort

@richardtol Interesting, but I'm not sure it provides the answer. I certainly may be misinterpreting the work you did, but climate is localized in experience, as is climate *change*. It's not that the climate as a whole gets warmer, cooler, wetter, drier. It's that it will do all those things at once (though more warming than cooling) depending on where you are.

The forecast for Canada illustrates this nicely. The climate is very regional and affected by the rain shadow of the Rocky Mountains (and the coastal range to a lesser extent). So the grain fields will see drought, and the coastal agriculture farms will see flooding. This has already affected crops and food prices. Then you have to account for locking in of weather systems due to resonance which exacerbates hot and cold spells. (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.aat3272)