Europe’s climate in 2050

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2021
  • The speed and magnitude of the climate change we are facing today is unprecedented. Heatwaves, droughts, floods... We are feeling its effects on our daily lives, year after year. Its impacts will increase at least until 2050 and every region of Europe will be affected.
    Based on the results of the latest available studies, and in particular, on the 6th IPCC report, this film, produced by scientists in the framework of the European project EUCP, aims to present to the general public the climate changes expected in Europe in 2050. The researchers explain in an accessible way the variations in temperature and precipitation as well as the extreme climate events that European inhabitants will have to face.
    This film provides the keys to understand how climate will reshape our landscapes and lifestyles over the coming decades. ... and to enable us to better anticipate the need for human societies to adapt to this partly inevitable climate change.
    **********
    This film is available in several languages:
    🇫🇷 • Quel climat en Europe ...
    🇪🇸 • El clima en Europa en ...
    🇭🇷 • Klima u Europi u 2050....
    🇮🇹 • Come sarà il clima in ...
    🇩🇪 • Europas Klima im Jahr ...
    🇸🇪 • Video
    🇬🇧 • Europe’s climate in 2050
    **********
    💻 For more information:
    - The European Climate Prediction System (EUCP)
    👉 www.eucp-project.eu
    - The CNRS news website
    👉 news.cnrs.fr/climate-change
    - IPCC-AR6, WGI
    👉 www.ipcc.ch/assessment-report...
    - IPCC Interactive Atlas
    👉 interactive-atlas.ipcc.ch
    - "Making climate projections conditional on historical observations", Ribes et al. 2021
    👉 doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abc0671
    - "Assessment of the European Climate Projections as Simulated by the Large EURO-CORDEX Regional and Global Climate Model Ensemble", Coppola et al. 2021
    👉 doi.org/10.1029/2019JD032344 (paid access)
    - "Understanding climate change from a global analysis of city analogues", Bastin et al. 2019
    👉 doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone....
    - "The first multi-model ensemble of regional climate simulations at kilometer-scale resolution part 2: historical and future simulations of precipitation", Pichelli et al. 2021
    👉 doi.org/10.1007/s00382-021-05...
    📽 Scientific Director: Samuel Somot (Météo France), Centre national de recherches météorologiques (CNRM - Météo France / CNRS)
    Production: Emmanuel Somot, Yves Dorsi, www.vuxe.fr
    Screenplay: Marina Martinez
    Music: Tristan Lepagney
    © CNRS, 2021
    __________________
    🔔 Subscribe to the @CNRS channel
    Follow us on social media!
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Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @kongdaniel
    @kongdaniel Год назад +2037

    In 2020 it was talked about a possible 40 degrees in London in 2050. It happened yesterday.

    • @SimpleLifeAlways81
      @SimpleLifeAlways81 Год назад +188

      It is happening real fast, man.

    • @ian.dalisay
      @ian.dalisay Год назад +76

      unexpectedly due to the massive heat wave, the numbers are so horrible and the prediction were so ahead by 30 years. a lot can still change within that timeframe 💀

    • @DailyDoseofSpace.
      @DailyDoseofSpace. Год назад +79

      I think the first 50 degree day in Sydney will come within the next 5 years for sure

    • @Matt-fh4bk
      @Matt-fh4bk Год назад +109

      @@DailyDoseofSpace. once countries start to hit 50 degrees Celsius it’s over… 40 is already insane but 50? We are done.

    • @emotivelyy_
      @emotivelyy_ Год назад +45

      @@Matt-fh4bk some countries even many years ago have already reached 50

  • @kapoioBCS
    @kapoioBCS 2 года назад +2302

    Even in this video, the most upvoted comments are the stupidest. E.g. the comments about being excited about warmer summers 🤦‍♂️

  • @MrTrickFM
    @MrTrickFM Год назад +443

    I have personally noticed one such change in my country.
    In Romania, fig trees used to be almost unheard of - except for the S-E and S-W regions. My grandfather was Greek and he was the only person in his village (S-E Romania) to have such a tree in his yard (I'm talking about the '60s and '70s). However, my grandmother had to permanently cover it in wintertime, in order to protect it from frost. Although it survived the cold seasons, it grew only to the shrub level and never became a tree in the true sense of the word. Even the figs produced were small, green and unable to ripen in Romania's climate BACK THEN.
    Nowadays, the winters in my region have become so mild (no snowfall for nearly a decade now) and the summers so dry (rainfall in Romania used to have maxima in summers) that the fig trees can actually grow and reach maturity, just like in the Mediterranean region. There are now entire plantations of fig trees in my region!
    As a result, I have bought some figs from my city market this autumn and they were EXACTLY the same as the figs that can be found in e.g. Greece, where I had lived for two years. Without knowing of the newly established plantations, I would have suspected the figs to have been imported from Greece or Italy!

    • @BaumerPaulGefreiter
      @BaumerPaulGefreiter Год назад +10

      Thank you for this report.

    • @poznajaximum4955
      @poznajaximum4955 Год назад +3

      Hope climat will be warmer and more rains look like in period dinosaurus.

    • @Emory-wk3pw
      @Emory-wk3pw Год назад +1

      I think this could be really bad

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад +3

      All natural changes.

    • @karma2.098
      @karma2.098 Год назад +8

      Same here in the UK. Palm and banana trees I've only ever once seen in Caribbean areas I now see in London and Manchester cities 😲

  • @parismalaspinas2488
    @parismalaspinas2488 Год назад +319

    I'm from Athens, Greece.
    I was born in 1994 and I remember back then everyone used to praise the Athenian climate. It was warm but not very hot in summer and we had mild winters. Since 2018 it has snowed more than 5 times in Athens which is extremely rare and the summers are absolutely unbearable. We don't have fall anymore. It goes from hot summer to freezing cold weather. It also rarely rains but when it rains everything floods. It's just not the same anymore.

    • @TheCompleteGuitarist
      @TheCompleteGuitarist Год назад +13

      So you remember 94, the year you were born? I don't remember anything from the year I was born. Aside from the fact that all my memories as a child are no evidence of anything. THere was a massive drought between 76 and 77 in the UK and I have no memory of it whatsover, I was 10/11 the only thing I do remember is the day it rained. I vaguely remember incredibly mild winters. Going cycling on christmas day without fear of any kind of extreme weather event. While in through the 90s in the UK I very well remember snow and ice and very cold winters, even news of people freezing to death on their doorsteps because they were not prepared for cold winters. None of my memories form any kind of evidence of any trend in weather.
      You've been gaslighted. Global temperatures have been falling for the last 7 years. I now live in Uruguay and we've just come out of a long and very cold winter by local standards, wearing winter clothes and winter bedding into november when it should be the start of summer.
      And so what if it is not the same. The sun is a very powerful ball of fire whose output changes constantly. You think we can control for that massive furnace? I hope you enjoy your chains.

    • @xaverlustig3581
      @xaverlustig3581 Год назад +11

      The hottest temperature ever measured in Athens (and Europe) was 48 degrees in 1977.

    • @Triple5live
      @Triple5live Год назад +1

      LOL.

    • @5287KT
      @5287KT Год назад +5

      I remember my grrk vacacions back in 1991 in athems. I´m from Madrid, (dry hot climate back then). Athens in August in 1991 was HELL ON EARTH. Don´t know hoy it is now. But it was daefinitely very vary warm there. Wouldn´t have praised it at all.

    • @5287KT
      @5287KT Год назад +2

      @@TheCompleteGuitarist I agree. So far the UN IPCC haven´t been right one single time. It is very interesting to analyze the fact that they tell Europe that Africa will be inhabitable according to the UN. We in Europe are causinf this, allthough Europes Co2 emisions are less than the worlds 10%... This message clearly has an objective.

  • @frontrowviews
    @frontrowviews Год назад +2470

    I feel like one massive issue that is regularly overlooked is mass climate migration. Huge densely populated parts of Africa and Asia just won’t be habitable anymore, resulting in a mass migration probably toward Europe, North America and south-east Asia

    • @Ikbeneengeit
      @Ikbeneengeit Год назад +1

      Yeah. Ironically the same people stalling action on climate change policy are the ones vehemently against refugees. There are 162 million people in Bangladesh, it will be underwater soon.

    • @danielnight5057
      @danielnight5057 Год назад +157

      Like it will be that easy for Africans to get visas to go to Europe and US and afford the move in general

    • @draphotube4315
      @draphotube4315 Год назад +81

      If this subject would have been more discussed, more Europeans wouldn’t see it as a far from my bed show.

    • @x-neimi4493
      @x-neimi4493 Год назад +52

      ​@@danielnight5057 LOL

    • @masthebake
      @masthebake Год назад

      @@danielnight5057 it’s a refugee crisis

  • @rikjansen4224
    @rikjansen4224 Год назад +1873

    Naming the issue of having to reinvent the 'winter mountain sports' as one of the issues in this video misses the point of the crisis that we are in. We wont be worrying about not being able to go skiing when we laterally cant grow food even in places like southern Europe....

    • @anthonymorris5084
      @anthonymorris5084 Год назад

      The Israelis have been turning deserts into farmland since the 1950's. Saudi Arabia is doing it today as well. Nobody is running out of food.

    • @psilver8057
      @psilver8057 Год назад +56

      Europe probably will be able to solve it's food needs alone. The problem is if it stands in the global market where prices should go up.

    • @Spratdragon
      @Spratdragon Год назад +17

      No there will be even more greening of the world by that point. Also we will have hydroponics and vertical farming.

    • @carlbennett2417
      @carlbennett2417 Год назад +88

      @@psilver8057 I love how you guys say this stuff as if you know what you're talking about.

    • @psilver8057
      @psilver8057 Год назад +25

      @@carlbennett2417 Then enlighten me on my mistakes.

  • @xXNekou
    @xXNekou 8 месяцев назад +168

    In Poland 15-20 years ago the winters were harsh, and we had lots of snow, usually from November till April. Now it's not as cold, and it seems my hometown in Poland only gets snow in January-March period. I see the climate change with my own eyes judging how seasons change in my country.

    • @lonalxaia
      @lonalxaia 8 месяцев назад +4

      I hope your pockets are deep too.

    • @opolskiowcaburz9929
      @opolskiowcaburz9929 7 месяцев назад

      I live in Poland and I'd say that most snow falls in december-january and springs are becoming increasingly cold while winters overall a bit warmer

    • @MichaelJ44
      @MichaelJ44 6 месяцев назад +3

      In the UK , 20 years ago it was scorching all summer and snowed in December. In 2023, it’s raining and windy in June and July, and it snows in December through to March. So I’m seeing the opposite with my eyes

    • @xXNekou
      @xXNekou 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@MichaelJ44 Yeah! Climate change doesn't mean that the whole planet will only get progressively warmer, but rather that climate will change drastically, and the weather will be harsher and more unpredictable. Some regions will get much warmer, but not all of them will became tropical. :)

    • @MichaelJ44
      @MichaelJ44 6 месяцев назад

      @@xXNekou
      So where does GLOBAL warming fit in? We’ve had 3 weeks of hot weather in the past 12 months. It’s not so global it seems

  • @steamlink4803
    @steamlink4803 9 месяцев назад +41

    I was born in 1994 and live in Switzerland. We used to be called 'The water castle of Europe'. But reports of water scarcity during summer are increasing and measures to save water are being increasingly issued by the government. This spring, it rained for 2 months without a break, and now it has stopped raining for almost 2 months entirely.

    • @reneburger4317
      @reneburger4317 8 месяцев назад

      So what?

    • @po-cf1ut
      @po-cf1ut 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@reneburger4317 So due to increased climate volatility water supply is feast or famine... water is a less dependable resource. This has a huge impact on agriculture and industry. Agriculture regarding both crop yields and animal husbandry (in recent years Swiss farmers have had to start helicoptering water up the mountains to support the usual cattle grazing pastures). For industry water from Switzerland support nuclear power plants in Switzerland, France and Germany. The water in these rivers also supports other aspects of German industry along the Rhine, from chemicals to manufacturing. With water less constant through irregular rain as well as less glacial melt water efficiencies in manufacturing as well as non-carbon power sources mean weaker economies and more reliance on carbon power which is root of the problem. I'm not sure your "so what" was just being facetious but the fact that people can tell just by looking at the last few years that the environment is changing quickly is telling. Someone born in 1994 and noticing rapid change is arguably more significant than someone identifying change from their youth in 1954.

    • @steamlink4803
      @steamlink4803 8 месяцев назад +4

      It means we, the country eith one of the fewest water related problems have started to get some serious issues. We already had Italy complain last year, to release more water downstream, because they had a drought, even though we barely had any reserves. So you already see the early signs of conflict regarding water. In the not too far future, we might see sanctions or even wars sparked by water scarcity.

    • @milahorowitz1
      @milahorowitz1 8 месяцев назад

      Sweden will be more like Switzerland I guess, your welcome to buy a house here

    • @skifter6956
      @skifter6956 8 месяцев назад

      Same with Albania

  • @Skillseboy1
    @Skillseboy1 Год назад +1762

    The temperature increase during winters in the northern regions of Europe is already happening. 10-15 years back, I remember winters in the Netherlands filled with ice skating, snowball fights, and sleighing for weeks or months on end. We haven't had such winters anymore for the last 5-10 years, having only occasional snowfall which melts away almost immediately or frozen waters for a couple of days.

    • @stefanbog2495
      @stefanbog2495 Год назад +206

      difference in Serbia is crazy,
      i m from central part of Serbia, and in 2004-2008 i remember playing in snow from december up to march that is 4 months of snow, in the last 5y we could see only 5-10days of snowing and snow almost never stayed longer then a day or couple of days, the difference is so notable that it is crazy how fast it changed and how little people actually questioned that change

    • @sectorgovernor
      @sectorgovernor Год назад +109

      I'm 31 years old from Hungary, I remember much colder winters in the late 90's. - 10C and below was average in January. In the last 15-20 years, winter has started to simply disappear. I don't remember when we saw a white Christmas.

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +30

      The carbon /toxicity footprint of the military industrial complex anybody?

    • @stefanbog2495
      @stefanbog2495 Год назад +26

      @@lorenzoblum868 without military you can't have a country so.... it is either you invest or you lose a country

    • @Arnouxvaze
      @Arnouxvaze Год назад +43

      Same in Budapest. I played so much in the snow when I was kid. My kids now barely see any snow nowadays and yes it melts quickly. I am living in the exact same place as when I was kid

  • @The_Orgazoid
    @The_Orgazoid Год назад +124

    Nevermind 2050, this video feels like it was made for 2022

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Год назад +10

      hilarious

    • @Rick-yk5qb
      @Rick-yk5qb 26 дней назад

      Did you think the climate was never supposed to change?

    • @Rick-yk5qb
      @Rick-yk5qb 18 дней назад

      Maybe this video was made for 1922. : The Washington Post - November 2, 1922 REPORT ON GLOBAL WARMING. You got scammed, sorry.

    • @Vox_Popul1
      @Vox_Popul1 15 дней назад

      @@Rick-yk5qbnot this quickly, and you can go look at the records to confirm this

  • @spielpfan7067
    @spielpfan7067 6 месяцев назад +35

    Here in Austria, especially in the alps, it's crazy. In the first half of the 00s we had snow every single year. It was possible to go skiing, it was possible to go sledding in my neighbourhood, both without artificial snow. From 2015 on we needed at least a little bit of artificial snow to still go skiing and sledding. And the last time it was possible in my neighbourhood area was in 2018. Since then there was either no snow or so little that it was impossible to go skiing/sledding. Everyone can notice things like that. That's very disturbing.

    • @u_w5822
      @u_w5822 6 месяцев назад +3

      And statistically it says nothing. What are 10-15 years compared to the age of the earth. 0,00000xxxx0000001 percent.

    • @yf.f4919
      @yf.f4919 5 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@u_w5822 It has no sense to compare with ALL earth's history, considering that we (as mankind) are a very very small part of it. The climate has already changed since the industrial revolution, and will continue to do so more drastically if we still emit greenhouse gases. If you are ok with that, just say it and I hope your children won't suffer from your stubbornness (but they will).

    • @u_w5822
      @u_w5822 5 месяцев назад

      @@yf.f4919 i am very ok with it, because no valid proof.

    • @pandconfid
      @pandconfid 4 месяца назад

      ​@@yf.f4919Did you rub your magical balls to see the future? You just repeat some stuff you saw in a few videos and now act like you know exactly what will happen

    • @juannaym8488
      @juannaym8488 Месяц назад +1

      I live in Vienna and remember that as a child, we had white Christmases every couple of years. We didn't have a white christmas since 2012, and I think the last white christmas before 2012 was in 2005 or so. We've had like 2 or 3 days of snow in the entire winter, meanwhile, we've had 15 degrees+ in February. I already see flowers, trees and shrubs blooming, and it's just mid Februrary

  • @rubenbraekman4515
    @rubenbraekman4515 Год назад +25

    As a kid I used to to play in the snow for days on end, there was snow for at least a couple weeks a year. But now I miss the sight of snow here in Belgium... it might snow for a few days a year or not at all... climate change is real and it's all around us for those who want to see

    • @BinaryBlueBull
      @BinaryBlueBull 8 месяцев назад +3

      Also from Belgium. I concur. I remember building snow forts as a child. That is impossible now, there just isn't enough snow anymore. The last 5 years it hardly snowed at all and if it did, it would be minor and gone the next day. It is impossible to miss the signs unless you don't want to see them

    • @RapunzelASMR
      @RapunzelASMR 7 месяцев назад +1

      yeah same :( Im also from belgium and miss it

    • @spielpfan7067
      @spielpfan7067 6 месяцев назад

      Same here in the Austrian alps.

  • @MellonVegan
    @MellonVegan Год назад +477

    Even today, 30% of Germany's forests are dying bc we've had record droughts for 3 consecutive years. Not to speak of the associated crop failures. And snow? Doesn't exist in winters, anymore. But then you'll have sudden hailstorms in April.
    Yet still people deny climate change. It's ridiculous.

    • @nonameguy1427
      @nonameguy1427 Год назад +35

      Can confirm. I live in Bavaria, when I was a little kid, I remember going ice skating with all my friends for weeks on end. Nowadays, theres not even snow anymore for months, and then suddenly, all hell freezes over for one evening / night making even roads covered by a thick sheet of ice thick enough to ice skate on them. Driving impossible

    • @nonameguy1427
      @nonameguy1427 Год назад +6

      I dont necessarly think the waetver in my hometown is getting so much hotter (but definetly a little bit hotter for sure) but the weather we do have is just soooo much more extreme.
      Its nor just snow and ice, it even doesnt rain for weeks and then it all comes down in a single day like a flood

    • @kornelmartini3255
      @kornelmartini3255 Год назад +17

      Same shit happening in Poland, we haven't seen regular snowy winters since 2015/14. The worst part is that in Poland we gonna have lack of underground water supplies of this continues, in a decade or two.

    • @gleqy
      @gleqy Год назад +2

      same where i live, it feels lile we're getting shorter and shorter Winters with much less snowfall

    • @carlomontecarlo7881
      @carlomontecarlo7881 Год назад +9

      Same in northern Italy. There was a massive storm in 2018, named Vaia. It caused more than 1.8 billion euros in damage in the Veneto region alone. The winds reached a speed of more than 200 km/h. The storm was so strong it decimated the alpine forests, uprooting 14 million trees - I think they just finished cleaning up the mess of that storm...
      Summer temperatures are sky high, too. In the 1990s max summer temps hovered around 27°C to 32°C max. Now we get heatwaves every summer, they last for days and push temps above 32°C very easily... We also get violent hailstorms and rain is more violent, too - the media have coined a new phrase, "Bomb of water" (bomba d'acqua) to describe these new phenomena that we're witnessing.

  • @sr-miguel05
    @sr-miguel05 Год назад +285

    I'm from Spain, I live in the South-East and currently dealing with the summer is horrible, it is so hot that you can't think clearly and you need to have the air on 24/7, if this gets worse in the coming years it will literally be impossible to endure these summers. Two days ago there were already cases in the news of workers and old people who had died from "heat stroke" and the worst thing is that it's till only on July.

    • @Thepaleking1920
      @Thepaleking1920 Год назад +20

      Tienes razón. Yo estoy esperando a que venga el invierno que me estoy muriendo ya.

    • @sr-miguel05
      @sr-miguel05 Год назад +11

      @@Thepaleking1920 Pués ahora viene lo peor así que a meternos bajo las piedras o algo, por aquí hoy han habido 43°C según el termometro del coche a la sombra

    • @Thepaleking1920
      @Thepaleking1920 Год назад +1

      @@sr-miguel05 Cierto, aunque créeme que no queda mucho para que se acabe esto. Por cierto, ¿Dónde vives?

    • @sr-miguel05
      @sr-miguel05 Год назад

      @@Thepaleking1920 Del sur de la Comunidad Valenciana, entre Torrevieja y Murcia, (la Vega Baja) por si la conoces. Y tú?

    • @Thepaleking1920
      @Thepaleking1920 Год назад +1

      @@sr-miguel05 De Mallorca, de Inca para ser exactos (una ciudad por el centro). A la 13:00 ya estamos a 38 grados. Ni estando en una isla apenas me salvo.

  • @andreabazzoli2052
    @andreabazzoli2052 8 месяцев назад +59

    I am from northern Italy from the Alps region. Back when I was a kid we had regular snowfalls every winter, it has been 10 years and those have become rarer and rarer. I remember pleasant temperatures in the summer, now it is unbearable and every summer it seems like it is getting hotter

    • @lonalxaia
      @lonalxaia 8 месяцев назад

      Don't worry they will tax you to death for that warm privilege.

    • @Aryannair.7
      @Aryannair.7 7 месяцев назад

      Where do we move
      Im from
      Italy
      Where shall we go mate

    • @brunoheggli2888
      @brunoheggli2888 7 месяцев назад +1

      Norway Finnland Iceland Argentina!

    • @brunoheggli2888
      @brunoheggli2888 7 месяцев назад

      North of Canada!Litauen

    • @garethward-stevens1596
      @garethward-stevens1596 5 месяцев назад

      And?

  • @summeroflove394
    @summeroflove394 8 месяцев назад +56

    It's sad to see less snowfall. European winters were always so beautiful. I cannot imagine a hot Christmas.

    • @elingrome5853
      @elingrome5853 6 месяцев назад +2

      cold to warm death ratio 8:1

    • @donu9297
      @donu9297 4 месяца назад +7

      You dont have to imagine it. Its already here

    • @sethmadlad5573
      @sethmadlad5573 Месяц назад

      as a australian thats normal for me

    • @Rick-yk5qb
      @Rick-yk5qb 26 дней назад

      It's just fear mongering used to push a global scam on us.

    • @Rick-yk5qb
      @Rick-yk5qb 26 дней назад

      @@elingrome5853 Thank god a free thinker is here. Nice to meet you. Exactly correct, cold kills more people AND ANIMALS by far than warming, not to mention how hard it is to grow food where it's freezing cold. Warming is good and the Earth isn't as hot as they pretend it is right now because were still close to the bottom of a giant millions of years of ICE AGE. This is what a global scam looks like.

  • @n5ryan5
    @n5ryan5 Год назад +151

    As a farmer in Ireland, it thankfully appears that we won’t have as strong climate change effects as other European countries so we’ll have to produce more food for Europe. Currently, Ireland can produce food for 9 times our population (5 million). We’re currently putting big funds towards sustainable agriculture research so we can produce more but more efficiently. We got this💪🏻🌱☘️

    • @nicevideomancanada
      @nicevideomancanada Год назад +11

      to feed an ever growing population, Great!

    • @kalismols606
      @kalismols606 Год назад +4

      @@LL-LLLL9 rain and cold sound like a blessing

    • @looke3392
      @looke3392 Год назад +12

      Well you have 5 million because the rest starved due to your lack of adapting in the 19th century.

    • @avanicholson
      @avanicholson Год назад +3

      @@looke3392 😕

    • @jumble-1238
      @jumble-1238 Год назад +3

      It’s still creeping up in Ireland. 33 degrees in Phoenix Park last month was awful. Still have my window open all night and we’re just not equipped for it.

  • @reedtveeter8721
    @reedtveeter8721 Год назад +567

    I'm from the Netherlands and was born in the early 80's. I can still remember those years we had winters with regular frost and snow, this changed enormously in the last 20 years with less and less frost. In recent years, climate change seems to been accelerating with the first 40 degrees in the Netherlands 3 years ago, and the last winters have also been almost without frost. Next week we will have to deal with another record breaking heatwave here again and the still fresh heat record will probably be broken again with temperatures up to 43 degrees! Unprecedented and terrifying.

    • @cowboy6993
      @cowboy6993 Год назад +6

      Vrij warme dag vandaag was het.

    • @James-fg8rf
      @James-fg8rf Год назад +37

      Same here! Born in 92 in London. I used to have snow days! Can’t remember the last to,e it snowed. And I certainly never recalled heat over 30 degrees, yet today it hits 40. I do not understand climate naysayers. They must be totally blind

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Год назад

      @@James-fg8rf provide untampered, empirical and direct evidence that what you claim is due to man made climate change ?
      waiting !

    • @James-fg8rf
      @James-fg8rf Год назад

      @@richardcowley4087 still waiting honey pot

    • @eleanor3323
      @eleanor3323 Год назад +3

      Yes this is truly horrible

  • @Metonoktaexe
    @Metonoktaexe Год назад +14

    In Turkey, over here in my region, the snow just rains for 4-5 specific days in these years. The previous winter, thus being the biggest snowing in Istanbul in 32 or 37 years, it dropped to here a few weeks later here before melting away after 4-5 days. (I'm very close to Istanbul) And damn, I'm lucky that I'm not in South-East. It is burning every summer as always. It will get worse overtime.

  • @enemdisk6628
    @enemdisk6628 8 месяцев назад +3

    I did a tour to a historic water tower in Germany 20 years ago that was still in use.
    The waterworks employee that held the tour explained due to water saving appliances and a change in people's habits that cause less waste of fresh water the pipes (fresh and waste water) suffer because they would not get flushed enough anymore since they were designed to transport a much larger quantity of liquid.
    He explained for that reason and since the upkeeping costs were more or less the same for either scenario and that Germany (at least the region the water tower is) has plenty of water the waterworks encourage people to use more water. The increase in cost was not due to the amount used in the system but for its upkeep. If they would use more it price per hectolitre would drop (leaving you with the same bill at the end). Quite believable given the high regulations of the market on water in Germany. After all he explained the region had more water than it needs!
    Buuut 20 years later there are communities in the very same region that had to restrict water consumption for the first time ever due to drought.

  • @maxmadovsky5423
    @maxmadovsky5423 Год назад +411

    As a 17 year old this video makes me wanna cry

    • @hugrid9647
      @hugrid9647 Год назад +67

      same, we're gonna die probably

    • @BigBodyBiggolo
      @BigBodyBiggolo Год назад

      Dont worry be happy, look at the changes predicted for 2022 in 1970s, almost none of then are right.
      Shit didnt hit the fan but the powers that be moved the shit close enough to stink up the place and make us pay more money for the problems they caused.

    • @samuelsomot4404
      @samuelsomot4404 Год назад +58

      Sorry for making you cry. It is better to know what the future climate is expected. This may allow to prepare the society to this new paradigm

    • @CunningStuntsGoFast
      @CunningStuntsGoFast Год назад

      when i was 17 we where gonna die of acid rain and ozon holes , dont worry , it will go away . only problem you got is getting emotional over a video , this is what the video was made for , to bully you into not questioning their statements , and it worked . the conmen and their agenda is the real problem your generation have to arm against

    • @XxT0kY0DrfTstYlExX
      @XxT0kY0DrfTstYlExX Год назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣 you should be more afraid of the elite pushing this climate agenda that will imprison you in a digital cell.

  • @dama9150
    @dama9150 Год назад +58

    And not one of the Paris targets have been reached...

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Год назад +7

      In fact doubling down doing the opposite !

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +4

      The elephant in the room, the military industrial complex is exempt from the Kyoto Protocol and Paris Agreement...

    • @dama9150
      @dama9150 Год назад +1

      @@lorenzoblum868 If the consequences weren't so serious the pathetic response to CC would be laughable...

  • @zoltan9767
    @zoltan9767 Год назад +45

    2050 ? We're already experiencing most of what she is talking about.

    • @after_midnight9592
      @after_midnight9592 Год назад +11

      True, this is what is most scary. 2050 predictions happening 30 years earlier.

    • @Afganistan289
      @Afganistan289 7 месяцев назад +1

      i hope ill survive in this word when i get old

    • @myla2102
      @myla2102 Месяц назад

      @@after_midnight9592 Oui, et pourtant nous ne sommes « qu’à »2°et demi …😮 celà va plus vite qu’annoncé. La vidéo n’est pas récente. Nous nous sauverons tous ou pas du tout. Mais je suis pessimiste, partager n’est pas compatible avec notre civilisation, en majorité. Cela va-t-il changer avec nos nouvelles générations?
      On peut craindre aussi que ceux qui vont le plus souffrir n’auront même plus la possibilité de migrer

    • @Rick-yk5qb
      @Rick-yk5qb 26 дней назад

      Please stop helping genocidal traitors push their climate scam.

    • @Rick-yk5qb
      @Rick-yk5qb 26 дней назад

      @@after_midnight9592 False. None of their predictions are coming true because it's all lies.

  • @kaninma7237
    @kaninma7237 8 месяцев назад +15

    I immigrated to my ancestral homelands in Central Europe, but my family in Texas is suffering from the heat dome that produced more than ten days in a row of real feel temperatures over 40 C (104 F). This is, I believe, unprecedented for June near Houston, Texas. Here we never got into the 80s in June, and now we will have a number of July days in the low to mid 80s with night temperatures in the 60s or high 50s. We are still rather fortunate here, but the whole system effects everyone and we give a damn about others.

    • @txbre8758
      @txbre8758 26 дней назад

      I almost died in Texas last summer, I was only outside for a few hours and felt I could handle it as I’m from Arizona. I drank so much water and ended up passed out outside with EMS and I don’t remember what happened honestly. i now have issues :( first time I’ve ever experienced this

  • @benpatti7110
    @benpatti7110 2 года назад +469

    You know there is one ‘slightly’ more troubling scenario for Europe's future climate - and that’s the looming prospect of an AMOC disruption. Remember, this tipping point doesn’t always have to be strictly met at say
    +3 degrees of warming. It could be closer than ever, because the other tipping points surrounding the North Atlantic (Greenland ice melt) can be reached much earlier. This is so because tipping points can trigger each other by unstable interactions.
    If it happens, Britain and Scandinavia will become stormier and snowier, Central Europe would have extremes hot and cold too, and suppose Southern Europe would get wet and dry cycles.

    • @thetechnicanwithaheart1682
      @thetechnicanwithaheart1682 Год назад +59

      I study anthropocene climate change and paleoclimatology. Yes if the Atlantic murielle overturning circulation was to significantly slow down, it would put Europe into a very very bad cycle of very bad Winters. It would cause Florida and the southeast United States into a sauna like condition killing probably thousands of people during the heat waves

    • @kimballspeakthreetheater3318
      @kimballspeakthreetheater3318 Год назад +21

      The dramatic reduction of (and possibly entirely shutting down of temporarily) AMOC is probably what puts Earth into each Ice Age.

    • @thetechnicanwithaheart1682
      @thetechnicanwithaheart1682 Год назад

      @@kimballspeakthreetheater3318 no it does not shutting down the amoc will actually cause wicked cold temperatures in Europe during the winter months and substantially increase the intensity and strength of hurricanes in the summer months in the South Atlantic. Is predicted that hurricane strength to reach category 6 and category 7 that will only accelerate Mass migration of climate migrants North

    • @benpatti7110
      @benpatti7110 Год назад +9

      @@kimballspeakthreetheater3318 Well, I dunno about the whole Earth dropping into a freeze... It would certainly cool Europe and make it stormier year round. As for the rest of the world I can't say exactly what the outcome is, but one thing I do know is that it could drastically shift the rain bands/ other pressure zones - southward. This is so due to the heat finding its way into the Southern hemisphere. The entire global atmospheric circulation would be mirrored.

    • @wadeinn463
      @wadeinn463 Год назад +5

      @@thetechnicanwithaheart1682 …. I live in FL. Got a link for me to read more? I might sell.

  • @dddsss2023
    @dddsss2023 Год назад +252

    One theory that is still very popular is that if the polar ice melts, the gulf stream might stop which is necessary to transport warm water and heat to Europe. If you look at Europe from a latitude view, it is very comparable to Canada. I would like to see a scientific video investigating the effects of a missing gulf stream on the climate in Europe, but also globally. Now, that would be really interesting.

    • @igor7195
      @igor7195 Год назад +35

      Long story short,UK would have 6 months of winter.

    • @thekraken1173
      @thekraken1173 Год назад +6

      That might be beneficial for my country though

    • @sunshineimperials1600
      @sunshineimperials1600 Год назад

      So much global warming it causes global cooling. Ironic

    • @halrd2651
      @halrd2651 Год назад +32

      Oh god that would absolutely ruin Ireland it would be winter all year round

    • @dezafinado
      @dezafinado Год назад +10

      A theory on top of that theory... if the ice sheets (AC units) at both poles were out of service, global temps will be higher, a lot higher across the board.

  • @greychi
    @greychi 7 месяцев назад +1

    i noticed it for a while. like when i was a child my fingers would turn blue from the cold. it was a struggle to keep my hands warm and i had to wear layers of clothing. past winters most days i didnt even wear a coat, a thick sweater sufficed, and my hands never got cold. it’s kinda terrifying

  • @adamuppsala1931
    @adamuppsala1931 11 месяцев назад +4

    This video is like preaching to the choir. Europe has already done a lot to reduce the climate change. Please make this video for Asia and America. They pollute many times more than we do.

  • @realBryanAlejandro
    @realBryanAlejandro Год назад +145

    Using this analysis, the places that are normally warmer right now will become unbearable in the future

    • @kimwarburton8490
      @kimwarburton8490 Год назад +4

      Check out 'wet bulb effect'

    • @okamijubei
      @okamijubei Год назад

      uh... define... normally...?

    • @memesmojo5622
      @memesmojo5622 Год назад +23

      @@okamijubei tropical and subtropical regions.

    • @senseofthecommonman
      @senseofthecommonman Год назад +15

      The only unbearable thing is that you believe that, temperatures must be very high between your ears.

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +4

      The carbon /toxicity footprint of the military industrial complex anybody?

  • @2138Dude
    @2138Dude Год назад +114

    I hate heat. Whenever temperature rises above 27 I can barely get up from my bed, and i can barely work. Im 29 years old and even throughout such small period I can see the climate change in my area. I rarely have proper snowy weather in winter, and summer is scorching. Yet in my childhood it wasn't like that

    • @goldenwolf2754
      @goldenwolf2754 Год назад +11

      In iraq 55 c
      😂

    • @frah_educational9926
      @frah_educational9926 Год назад +3

      27 Celsius man? You're fortunate. Here in Italy it's 35 Celsius in July/August

    • @hasekfan2450
      @hasekfan2450 Год назад +27

      It's crazy how these two other people just try to "1up" you instead of showing empathy. What a world we live in.
      I feel you man! I hate the heat too, I hope we can stop this before It's too late.

    • @frah_educational9926
      @frah_educational9926 Год назад +5

      @@hasekfan2450 I was just saying that in other parts of the world things are worse. Obviously we should make something against climate change

    • @hasekfan2450
      @hasekfan2450 Год назад +9

      @@frah_educational9926 Perhaps you meant it with good intentions, but my impression of your comment was different. The original poster was just venting about the heat and you could of provided a supporting comment like "I understand how you feel", but instead what you said came across like "cool story bro but my country is hotter than yours". That's just how I read it.

  • @dominicgd2768
    @dominicgd2768 8 месяцев назад +16

    The recent winters here in my city in Germany were very mild. When I was a child we used to have white winters with lots of snow. 2 years ago it was so warm, it didn't feel like winter at all. I wonder what our country is going to be like in 2050.

    • @kolyaselenkov5256
      @kolyaselenkov5256 8 месяцев назад +3

      That is why NATO wants to attack Russia where it is safe to live in Siberia.
      😂

    • @user-iu2um8fd8n
      @user-iu2um8fd8n 8 месяцев назад

      Here in Austria there is also less and less snow, although there are always years with extremely high snowfall. Spring this year was also very special, the first half of January was more like March, but in April and May it was very cold, so cold that the apricot fruits were destroyed because of late frost. The distribution of rain also changed, with extremely heavy rainfall for weeks and then drought for weeks.

    • @Evrastrim
      @Evrastrim 7 месяцев назад

      @@kolyaselenkov5256 If NATO tries to attack Russia the whole planet will instantly become so warmer 😂 In a matter of hours, not years 😂

    • @herbayum76
      @herbayum76 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@kolyaselenkov5256 very funny..only problem is the permafrost is gone so everything disappears in a swamp releasing lots of methane..

    • @garrymcgrath7125
      @garrymcgrath7125 6 месяцев назад

      Don't worry about it 👍

  • @adec.881
    @adec.881 7 месяцев назад

    I'm from southern Romania, around 150 kms away from the Capital City. Our winters used to be white: we had a ton of snow, but for the past decade we've had under 10 days of snow every winter (usually in January-February, but once it also snew in April for some reason). The heat during summer has become unbearable. The Temperature is constantly between 35-40*C During the day and i can't even stand being outside in the shade anymore. This entire Summer i stayed inside simply because of how unbearable it is to be outside. I was forced to move downstairs (my room is in the attic) due to how hot it is up there. We only have Water 10 Hours per day during Summer and usually the pressure is very low. It's gotten so bad that i cheer whenever it rains. We're eventually going to stop having Spring and Winter, instead we're only going to have Summer and Autumn if we continue at this rate: One dry season with constantly 40*C+ Weather and one wet season with bearable weather.

  • @atlanticstate9602
    @atlanticstate9602 Год назад +26

    we talk a lot about Europe and it's climate but we forget countries that live next to the desert like Morocco .. the country depends on rain or it's agriculture and it has already seen severe droughts in the last years and all the major dams are almost empty .. imagine the climate in Morocco in 2050 .

    • @ausbin6102
      @ausbin6102 Год назад +6

      droughts in Morocco are more severe year after year .. the situation is not good

    • @atlanticstate9602
      @atlanticstate9602 Год назад +5

      @@ausbin6102 yes south Morocco is already dependent on seawater desalination but it's very costly , the country imports 100% of it's energy needs

    • @WONGLER
      @WONGLER Год назад

      all africans will try to come to Germany

    • @2.3_44XD--
      @2.3_44XD-- Год назад

      They are building military base with israel. Soon they'll drone spain and will conquer south spain and other spanish places.

    • @atlanticstate9602
      @atlanticstate9602 Месяц назад

      @@etpoz actually for Morocco, investing in green energy is not "naive", the country imports 100% of it's energy needs (oil, natural gas, and even coil) .. the country is poor in terms of energy resources so that's why it's trying to be independent from the high global energy prices, and guess what! yes the price of the initial investment in green energy is high but on the long term it's much cheaper than importing all your needs from the outside .. and btw Morocco is the second most Industrialized country in Africa , and sooner it'll be the first because investments in the country are by tens of billions of dollars while South Africa is declining

  • @mark-o-man6603
    @mark-o-man6603 Год назад +189

    When I was younger I was always a little sad about the prospect that I won't be able to witness the second half of the 21st century, now I'm grateful that I won't. Unless humankind lands a huuuge "lucky punch" in terms of progress, it'll be a shitshow, because several issues will create a snowball effect.

    • @kv4648
      @kv4648 Год назад +27

      It's because of this mentality that this "shitshow" is going to happen

    • @deeveevideos
      @deeveevideos Год назад +7

      you can leave when ever you want.

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Год назад

      bullshit

    • @e52n
      @e52n Год назад +2

      you really said 21th. holy shit.

    • @deeveevideos
      @deeveevideos Год назад +2

      @@e52n he has a lisp let him go

  • @tenhayz1889
    @tenhayz1889 5 месяцев назад +2

    I grew up in central France only 2 decades ago, I remember in early 2000s how every winter had a lot of snow in Januray and February, how the temperature slowly rose until summer and then slowly decreased until winter. Now when I spend time there, and my family confirms it, the climate doesnt make sense anymore, it barely snows in winter if at all, the temperature can rise and fall sharply (Im talking 20°C or more between min and max) in just one or 2 days, the rivers are shockingly low, bugs are mostly gone.
    Now I am part of the CNRS, am I allowed this video sounds naive? This year seems to be on track to, and probably will be the first one to be above +1.5, and if not it will be next year or most certainly during the next El Nino in the late 2020s. Taking into account the decrease in aerosols (we forbid some because they were destroying the ozone layer) which cooled the earth, the warming should accelerate in the coming years. Given how our current economic and political system do not and cannot efficiently tackle the issue, I dont see how we do not reach +3 and not +2 around 2050. And at +3, with oil resources scheduled to be depleted around 2060, it is game over.
    The only solution to avoid collapse is to change the system built for the benefits of the few, so the many can change their ways of life, and fulfill their lives in art, society and science instead of economics.
    I live now in southern France and i plan to leave asap, this summer, like the last, was unbearable. June to October (5 months!) at or above 30°C, with several weeks at 35 and one full week at 40 (at this point staying outside is dangerous), inside temperature between 27 and 29 including at night in July and August is not a life.

  • @danielng3497
    @danielng3497 Год назад +3

    I'm from Malaysia and we also suffering deadly floods and extremely hot weather since late 2010s!

  • @ricktraversi8719
    @ricktraversi8719 Год назад +34

    spain, italy, greece, and turkey will be almost tropical dry.
    the whinter in southern europe will milder and the temperature will grow at 20°C degrees

    • @AD-yq8rl
      @AD-yq8rl Год назад

      Thankfully Turkey does have highlands that might protect them from the heatwaves coming from the sea level. However, I’m not sure even they’re enough to hold the climate change. Additionally, they already have 5-6 million refugees/migrants, I think these numbers will go up within the next decades (hope not tho)

    • @nenmaster5218
      @nenmaster5218 Год назад

      @@AD-yq8rl Knowledge is Key but spreading it
      to reach as many as possible ironically can make you seem like a bot,
      which turns people of from your helpful info-source nae-drop's: UpisNotJump, Hbomberguy, OCC; Climate-Town, Some More News, and Second Thought.

    • @OrkunMelihKoksal
      @OrkunMelihKoksal Год назад +3

      Tropical dry doesn't exist the tropics are the wettest places on earth

    • @ynacyr4
      @ynacyr4 Год назад

      @@OrkunMelihKoksal actually it does. In northeast Brazil there is an environment called caatinga. It is basically a desert. There are also sand dunes deserts like Dunas do Rosado.

  • @ChalfantMT
    @ChalfantMT Год назад +45

    Make one of these for each continent.

    • @luizmatthew1019
      @luizmatthew1019 Год назад

      The EU funded this video, so it won't happen

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +8

      And also one about the elephant in the room, the carbon /toxicity footprint of the military industrial complex.

    • @Arockersfantasy
      @Arockersfantasy Год назад

      @@lorenzoblum868 And China + India

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад

      @@Arockersfantasy reduce, reuse, replant, redestribute, reconsider, recycle...

  • @faithesprit81
    @faithesprit81 Год назад +2

    Whats the implications of Weather modification technologies which are currently in use, especially as a form of warfare?

    • @germanpatis9136
      @germanpatis9136 6 месяцев назад +1

      i see no one talking about this,yet i bet we are being manipulated

    • @faithesprit81
      @faithesprit81 6 месяцев назад

      @@germanpatis9136" those who control our weather control our food"

  • @Havardr_Ash_Kenaz
    @Havardr_Ash_Kenaz 3 месяца назад +3

    If the AMOC collapse between now and 2050 northern Europe and parts of North America will see a drop in temperatures that have never been seen in recorded history.

  • @navigates3557
    @navigates3557 Год назад +35

    Still making it sounding pretty cool, even not considering other major issues we are going to face. Many many will highly probably die from starvation, wars and diseases. Maybe a little less in Europe (?), But not snowboarding anymore will definitely be our very last problem

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 Год назад +3

      It's a scam.

    • @isocarboxazid
      @isocarboxazid 8 месяцев назад

      @@ricktd6891I think we should get your names, set a boundary, and when the earth inevitably goes over it, causing untold suffering...you should be held personally financially and criminally responsible.

    • @ricktd6891
      @ricktd6891 8 месяцев назад

      @@isocarboxazid I'm glad you support responsibility because you and everyone else pushing the global warming scam are responsible for the deaths of millions of people and animals. Here's one genocide you helped cause. Search : "Biofuel Caused Food Crisis."

    • @herbayum76
      @herbayum76 6 месяцев назад

      Speak for yourself...the climate thing is a complot to ruin my ski holidays

    • @navigates3557
      @navigates3557 5 месяцев назад

      @@herbayum76 connect the present and the future is not easy, the part and the system neither. It would be also true to say "ski hollidays is a conspiracy to ruin ski hollidays"... it's at the same time one of the causes and one of the consequences.

  • @eaglempire_mapper
    @eaglempire_mapper 2 года назад +291

    Rising temperatures isn't always a good thing. The ice melts. So the seas might flood the coastal cities.

    • @Deathwalker666666
      @Deathwalker666666 Год назад +12

      The problem is perception of the situation because for worst case scenario of 2050 sea level rise we are talking roughly 1 meter or less. Which for most people on Earth means absolutely nothing because you can adapt to the worst case scenario for 2100 which is 2.5 meters way before 2040 hits.
      The actual problem is where your country is in relation to geographic location to put it simple if you live in USA where almost your entire country(minus Alaska and the good old Rust Belt) is one the same plane as Spain you are basically screwed due to heat and two other problems that sea water rise give:
      1. The first is that thanks to sea water rise natural circulation of water is also halted which means the water density will be on the fritz aka it will flood more where the water is warmer in comparison to the places where water is significantly colder. This why living closer to the either north or south pole might be an advantage in worst case scenario.
      2. And then you have the second problem if you live in Florida( or eastern USA in general) then you quickly find that hurricanse like catrina will be a freaking brieeze because more water that is also hotter means that hurricanes will be not only more common but also way stronger than those recorded up to this day. Basically the prediction are that USA will in worst case scenario will have few very big ones that will hit Louisiana and will rampage through eastern states up to north when it will enter North Atlantic through New England.

    • @thetechnicanwithaheart1682
      @thetechnicanwithaheart1682 Год назад +6

      It's a hell of a lot more technical than that. The Arctic acts as a air conditioner or heat pump for the entire northern hemisphere. Everyday gigatons of ice water is cycled from the Arctic into the southern latitudes and into the Gulf of Mexico and into the Indian Ocean. Its return Journey carries all this hot water back into the Arctic. If that slows down significantly expect to see hurricanes a category 6 or category 7. It will actually devastate the entire Caribbean and cause Mass deaths

    • @thetechnicanwithaheart1682
      @thetechnicanwithaheart1682 Год назад +3

      Actually you're quite wrong because the Arctic is the air conditioner of the northern latitudes and Northern Hemisphere. You turn off the air conditioner in your house when it's 120 degrees outside what do you think is going to happen inside your house? Or you can imagine it this way have a pool that's 200 ft long and put ice in the top 20% and then run air circulation fans that run in a circular fashion. You're at the opposite side of the pool and it's 120 degrees outside. You're going to stay cool as long as that ice there exists in that side of the pool because the water absorbs all the heat coming from the circulating fans now imagine if that ice disappears how hot do you think you'll be at the opposite side of the pool? Once the pool absorbs that extra heat they can no longer absorb the Heat and now it's at equivalent with inside the pool area. Eventually the inside of the pool area will reach the same temperature as the outside. That is a downscaled model planet Earth we're basically heading into another mass extinction. Humans are 100% responsible for having large families that is exceeding the population cap of planet Earth and basically Society will collapse. Millions upon millions of humans will migrate North and upwards of 1 billion humans will die in Parrish due to a global famine

    • @nicolatesla5786
      @nicolatesla5786 Год назад

      Its causing more intense and deadly heat waves, human migrations from famine "occurring now in South America, Africa and the Middle East" earth is heading to a mass extinction unless all deforestation and all carbon can be substantially reduced!

    • @cajunstrat
      @cajunstrat Год назад

      Yet the elites who push and profit from this alarmist garbage live on the coasts, like right on the coast aka, Obama and Al Gore. They know that you will pay for it.

  • @wardachrouaa7281
    @wardachrouaa7281 8 месяцев назад +6

    I'm from Belgium. As a child, I remember my father building an iglo for us in the winter, and me building huge snowmen higher then me, because snow was thick and longlasting. My children have never seen such snow and have never been able to build a larger snowman than 30 cm. Snow always melts immediately now.
    As for the winters, I must say that they have become much more pleasant. I remember how the cold in the winter would enter my gloves, freezing my hands. I remember the pain in my feet and hands after a walk of 15 minutes from the bare cold. The last 7 years we have no longer experienced that. That's something I like😅.
    I like the warming in winter and even the more frequent heatwaves. I feel more in holiday mood and my vitamin D deficiency has stopped. I no longer need to take vitamines for it.
    What is more difficult is not the changing of the climate, but the much more frequent 'wheather bulbs': when the wheather just remains unchanged for a month or more. We used to have a very changeable wheather, one day rain, one day sun. Now we remain without rain for months, causing droughts and heatwaves, followed up by a month of unending rain, causing floods.

    • @BinaryBlueBull
      @BinaryBlueBull 8 месяцев назад +3

      Also from Belgium, born in 1988 and I have the exact same experience as you. The change is dramatic and it seems to be accelerating in the last 5 years. It's is impossible to not see this unless someone wilfully doesn't want to see it. And I understand that winter is more pleasant and even that more heat and sunshine can be more pleasant. The problem is that it isn't going to stop there. One thing a lot of people don't know is that when CO2 is emitted, it takes between 10 and 20 years (estimates vary, 10 years is what the latest research says) to have its full impact on the climate. That means that we are now seeing the effects of emissions 10 to 20 years ago and that in turn means that we still have to see the effects of the crazy high emissions of the last decade. It also means that if we change our behaviour dramatically and cut down on CO2 emissions, it will take 10 to 20 years to really see the effects of that. There are a lot of scientists who say that keeping warming under 1.5°C is already impossible because the emissions to reach that level have already been released

    • @wardachrouaa7281
      @wardachrouaa7281 8 месяцев назад

      @@BinaryBlueBull absolutely true

    • @BinaryBlueBull
      @BinaryBlueBull 8 месяцев назад

      @@wardachrouaa7281 Woops, I made a mistake, I'm from 1988, not 1998 😛10 years difference is huge in this context, because when I was young the winters could still be severe some years. That is not the case for someone born in 1998, because by the time they were starting to form memories, it had already changed quite dramatically, though far from as much as it has in the last 5-10 years. Quite scary, since what we're seeing now is the result of emissions that happened 10-20 years ago, not from our current emissions, those still haven't started having an effect

  • @chronicfish
    @chronicfish Год назад +4

    It's almost mid November here in Greece and I'm still wearing a t-shirt, which is pretty crazy considering we start getting hot weather again in April. That means that *already* in 2022, our autumn and winters combined, are 4 months long.

    • @mychemical_sunshine5879
      @mychemical_sunshine5879 Год назад

      Its 19 degrees where I live ( England), it's crazy. It may not seem hot but it is.

    • @hubertflorianczyk7815
      @hubertflorianczyk7815 Год назад

      @@mychemical_sunshine5879 meanwhile, I'm freezing my ass off in Glasgow because me and my flatmates don't want to pay for heating with the temperature outside falling to 1°C at night LOL

  • @AlexandreLollini
    @AlexandreLollini Год назад +115

    Ice melting means less fresh water available. After 3 years of drought, the big trees start to go down. here is a dire need of soil coverage, and shade.

    • @senseofthecommonman
      @senseofthecommonman Год назад

      Go and have a lie down your poor brain needs a rest, I would think just breathing must tax it.

    • @khankrum1
      @khankrum1 Год назад +2

      It also means desalination killing off most of the saltwater fish that we eat.

    • @redhidinghood9337
      @redhidinghood9337 Год назад +14

      @@khankrum1 do you know how big the ocean is? You aren't desalinating the whole ocean just taking some seawater and putting it through a desalinating proccess. No fish involved.

    • @AlexandreLollini
      @AlexandreLollini Год назад +3

      @@khankrum1 existing desalination plants do not show any problem with the saltwater fish, it is overfishing the problem along with derelict fishnets and also deep fishing that drags the bottom of the ocean. Desalination plants are not a problem even if multiplied by 100.

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +1

      Khankrum must be trolling... Btw, the carbon /toxicity footprint of the military industrial complex anybody?

  • @amberkat8147
    @amberkat8147 Год назад +80

    I want one of these for North America, but especially the U.S. I want to know if the region my family and I live in will remain habitable, or even survivable for my sister and I as neither of us can sweat.

    • @hevi2866
      @hevi2866 Год назад +30

      It won't be a problem, don't sweat it...

    • @user-rx2ur5el9p
      @user-rx2ur5el9p Год назад +20

      I've repeatedly heard that only the Midwestern region will remain reasonably habitable. The Southwest will collapse because rich people won't stop sucking up the Colorado River and using the water to keep their golf courses lush.

    • @nevreiha
      @nevreiha Год назад +7

      @@user-rx2ur5el9p I heard the best spots are the midwest and the Pacific northwest, beside any wildfires, oregon and washington get lots of rainfall so they will be able to collect a supply to mitigate the effects of drought. The midwest is good too. Lots of storms will increase on the east coast and the southwest is literally a slowly cooking desert

    • @hansonel
      @hansonel Год назад +1

      Midwest will still have heat waves, wind storms, thunderstorms, possible flooding from downpours and tornadoes. Much better though than wildfires and drought that the west will experience...

    • @cosimobaldi03
      @cosimobaldi03 Год назад +3

      What do you mean by "you can't sweat"?

  • @thomashaller4876
    @thomashaller4876 4 месяца назад

    Are the predictions about collapse of golf stream leading to an icy europe now off the table ?
    Or is there still a probability ?
    Or what happened with those predictions ??

  • @austinnelson396
    @austinnelson396 Месяц назад

    I remember when I was younger (about 10-15 years ago) that we were lucky if we even had one day above 90°/32°C, but these last few summers, we’ve been having at least a week where our temperatures got close if not just about or above 40°C. Oh and 2 and a half years ago, we had our hottest temperature ever at around 45°C, the hottest spots in Oregon and Washington reached just under 50°C…

  • @Samirahmed-oi7vb
    @Samirahmed-oi7vb Год назад +32

    this aged well

  • @blhtml
    @blhtml Год назад +49

    "build our future together" you think the human kind is capable of that?

    • @izaakdamon1979
      @izaakdamon1979 Год назад +6

      Yes

    • @jaaurrh266
      @jaaurrh266 Год назад +10

      No

    • @bezklavikaszekminmespukzk9961
      @bezklavikaszekminmespukzk9961 Год назад +8

      That’s why we should replace humans with machines.
      Humans hate each other for small thinks like soccer, skin tone, religion.
      Machines would work together

    • @blhtml
      @blhtml Год назад +2

      @@bezklavikaszekminmespukzk9961 I was thinking that too the best ruler would be a machine (for a little while)

    • @a1ais315
      @a1ais315 Год назад +4

      We humans are too greedy for our own good, not giving a shit about anything else to get what we want

  • @perra5910
    @perra5910 Год назад

    Where can someone find these projections detailed globally?

  • @sydneylaroche8276
    @sydneylaroche8276 Месяц назад +1

    As a 30 year old, i don't remember them ever not talking about climate change or global warming. Like since 1993, we were constantly told how important it was to stop emissions at school and on the news. So what the hell were they actually doing all this time? I feel like my generation had no choice in this.

  • @vsjunior3517
    @vsjunior3517 Год назад +11

    2 degrees is inevitable, unless all the industrial things stopped for at least 10 years

    • @johns2260
      @johns2260 Год назад +1

      Are you for real??

    • @johns2260
      @johns2260 Год назад

      @@vsjunior3517 stop drinking

  • @welshskies
    @welshskies Год назад +11

    As an amateur astronomer I am aware that The Earth is unique and for the human race there is no planet B, if we bugger up this world there is nowhere else to go.

    • @Hudd413
      @Hudd413 Год назад

      If only people would contemplate this every day, change might occur, but they don't so our children and grandchildren will have to come to terms with our ignorance.
      Very sad times ahead fueled by greedy individuals and the big corporations.
      Next time you buy a plastic bag for 10p in the supermarket, thinking nothing of it and moan that it is so expensive, you are the problem.
      At least the planet will adapt and be OK. Maybe something incredibly beautiful will come out of it all.

    • @Shattered-Realm
      @Shattered-Realm 10 месяцев назад

      I doubt the earth is unique. We simply don't know. The first exoplanet was discovered in 2011 now there are thousands of them and that's just in the milky way galaxy. Many are in the Goldilocks zone of their star.
      I'm sure there are thousands of earth like planets within a 10 000 light year radius of earth. We just don't have FTL travel yet. But a year ago I I read that somebody had actually created a warp field accidentally on a microscopic scale so I wouldn't rule out our ability to travel to said planets eventually. Despite how impossible it seems now.

    • @moanova9199
      @moanova9199 9 месяцев назад

      we dont have plan B. Even if we try to go other planets we dont have the tevhnology or resources to do it. Climate change goes faster aleast we ger hwlp from alliens with their technology or sth

  • @miguelgarcia4404
    @miguelgarcia4404 5 месяцев назад +1

    Madrid's weather has changed a lot recently. I have memories of how it used to be when I was a little but today most of the year is like living in Riad. The weather is mostly unpleasant or freezing cold or unbelievable hot

  • @hris02
    @hris02 7 месяцев назад +1

    in Bulgaria we used to grow Apples and Quinces but with the climate warming and the abundance of rain , Olive trees and Citrus are thriving while other fruits are strugglig with the heat and abundance of rain

  • @titmo
    @titmo Год назад +6

    Funny how everything they're predicting for 2050 feels like 2022 :/

  • @billkallas1762
    @billkallas1762 Год назад +110

    By 2150, the average winter temperatures in coastal areas of Western Europe will begin to drop because of the collapse of the Gulf Current. The continued melting of the Greenland ice cap will be the cause of this. UK winter temperatures will be the same as the temperatures of interior Canada....This video ignores the effects of the collapse of the Gulf Stream.
    Countries in Eastern Europe do not see these warm winters because they are far from the ocean.

    • @davidmckendry7684
      @davidmckendry7684 Год назад +8

      I agree and try to get others to think about it as an added factor. No luck really!😎

    • @billkallas1762
      @billkallas1762 Год назад +4

      @@theadventurousallotmenteer6582 Why would there only be a 2-3C drip in Britain's temps, if the Gulf Stream stops?...I've never heard anyone else say what you said.
      PS. This wouldn't cause any sort of Ice Age in that area. Just a long period of cold snowy winters in the UK. A very long period.

    • @methe2960
      @methe2960 Год назад +26

      This is hypothetical, no model we have shows complete shutdown of the Gulf Stream. Weakening - maybe. Moreover, look at winter climate of Vancouver, which is pretty warm in winter even without a Gulf strem

    • @billkallas1762
      @billkallas1762 Год назад +17

      @@methe2960 Vancouver is on the opposite side of the Continent. A warm current flows past Western Canada, from South to North. This has nothing to do with the Atlantic Gulf Stream, that flows across the Atlantic to Western Europe.

    • @thetechnicanwithaheart1682
      @thetechnicanwithaheart1682 Год назад +5

      @@methe2960 it is absolutely critical that there needs to be a temperature difference between the Arctic and the mid-latitudes. You can actually do this model in your kitchen. Go buy a large aquarium and fill it with water. By a heat lamp and install it on one end of the tank. Aim the beam of light on that side of the tank. Buy some dye and put it into the ice tray. What you take out the blue eyes you dump the blue eyes on the other end of the tank and you'll start to see the circulation in motion. It's just like a heat pump. That the blue dyed water that melting off the ice. Will travel from left to right and then it will travel up the side wall of the tank and then it will travel left on the surface of the water. This is called the Atlantic Meridia overturning circulation.

  • @ShrunkedDude
    @ShrunkedDude Год назад +1

    In Scotland it rains nearly everyday from September to April with much of the Spring having much more rainfall than when I was in school.

  • @zsomborvasarhelyi7238
    @zsomborvasarhelyi7238 Год назад +3

    Let's act as soon as possible!
    Let's do something for our environment and the society of the future!

    • @grodt88
      @grodt88 Год назад

      lol! go and pay more taxes, buy solar etc. to make politics and bilionairs able to fly private jest while you will stay inside your dark room eating bugs to "save planet"

  • @fangugel3812
    @fangugel3812 Год назад +69

    I believe we may be too late because non-human emissions have increased as a result of the warming we have already caused. Methane emissions from permafrost is one example.

    • @laff__8821
      @laff__8821 Год назад +5

      Not yet actually

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +8

      One word : EXPONENTIAL. Btw, the carbon /toxicity footprint of the military industrial complex anybody?

    • @laff__8821
      @laff__8821 Год назад +2

      @@lorenzoblum868 not a major problem or something that can be fixed. Military is a good thing because it prevents war.

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +2

      @@laff__8821 are you some real scientist or on the military payroll?

    • @laff__8821
      @laff__8821 Год назад +2

      @@lorenzoblum868 it's my opinion. Never said i'm a "scientist"(could even mean i'm a mathematic) or a soldier. I can have my own point of view.

  • @dolfi173
    @dolfi173 Год назад +15

    puede sonar estúpido , pero los reyes antiguamente colgaban a los que o talaban sus bosques o hacían caza , algunos pueden considerar eso como inhumano pero lo legado por los reyes en forma de bosques , arroyos , palacios , etc. para las generaciones futuras es impresionante

    • @octem2251
      @octem2251 Год назад +14

      Los colgaban porque eran tierras exclusivas del rey, el era el único que podía talar y cazar ahí. No hay nada de ambientalista en esa política

  • @DjoumyDjoums
    @DjoumyDjoums Год назад +1

    What about the interruption of the gulf stream ? I saw that it could trigger a mini ice age over Europe, which is opposite to what is said in this video.

    • @basv8456
      @basv8456 Год назад

      I'm not an expert but what I understand from a quick google search is that ot will take quite a while before that happens.

  • @jackjack4504
    @jackjack4504 5 месяцев назад

    did the gulfstream getting slower was on the calcul?

  • @dnickaroo3574
    @dnickaroo3574 Год назад +28

    The Split Jet Stream means that Europe is a “Heat Wave” Hot Spot. This means it concentrates and maintains heat about 4 times better than other regions - especially from the Sahara.

    • @grindupBaker
      @grindupBaker Год назад +1

      Sort of. The way this works (the desert zone) involves "latent heat of evaporation-condensation" which is much energy equalling for 1 kg water the same as heating 10 kg water by 60 degrees (and some latent heat of fusion-freezing also). Air rises wet from the ocean around the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) just north of equator in May-August and cools by say 90 degrees while rising 15 km which condenses the H2O gas and the water rains back down there. It would have cooled by say 135 degrees but all that latent heat of condensation & freezing held back 45 degrees of cooling. As it heads north at 15 km up the Coriolis Effect turns it hard right so it's stopped there and descends and gets heated by pressure as it descends, but it's bone dry because its H2O fell out when it rose, so it heats by maybe 135 degrees as it descends by 15 km so it's now 45 degrees warmer than the warm tropics where it rose due to "latent heat of evaporation-condensation" cooling the tropics where it rose and putting its heat into the air. My example is an exaggeration because it's also radiating heat to space but it does carry several extra degrees of heat north in the air due to water latent heat. So that causes the Sahara Desert and also it's dry air descending which means no cloud so the summer Sun is blazing. The Mediterranean Sea is too deep to be dried to desert but southern Europe is destined to gradually become in the desert zone of dry descending air from ITCZ that I just described. It's inevitable as the global warming relentlessly progresses due to the +CO2.

  • @danielharland1354
    @danielharland1354 Год назад +43

    Don’t worry guys, Dave from the pub with a MSc on climate science from the university of life says 1976 was hotter than this and there is nothing to worry about

    • @abe9845
      @abe9845 Год назад +9

      Those people honestly wouldn't care one bit as they'll probably be dead by the time it gets really bad

    • @_mb_b_th_v_b_
      @_mb_b_th_v_b_ Год назад

      @@LL-LLLL9 Alright then I guess we'll just keep chugging along and burning fossil fuels. It'll also cause hundreds of millions of people to die from starvation, but with the fun added bonus of famines, droughts, large uninhabitable zones, mass climate migration, extreme economic strain, civil unrest, wildfires, desertification, the melting of the ice caps and permafrost, sea level rise and acidification, and the extinction of critical ocean life which maintains the food chain and feeds millions. No big deal apparently.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Год назад +6

      @@LL-LLLL9 If we had our way we would keep weaning off FF at the rate that we are doing, no idiot would shut down all carbon output in one day so stop with the exagerative hyperbole, it just weakens whatever your argument is.

    • @yyperi
      @yyperi Год назад

      @@LL-LLLL9 Except there has been numerous warnings to stop using fossil fuels since the 60s. There was plenty of time. Looks like you aren't aware of how many people will die because of climate change, in worst case scenario (look at what happened to Venus) it will be billions.

    • @manuelpopp1687
      @manuelpopp1687 Год назад +7

      @@LL-LLLL9 If we've had had our way back in the days when climate change was first discovered, we would not worry about energy now since we would have already mastered the transition. We could have regenerative energy and electric cars for many decades now, if it wasn't for the lobby of certain industries that tried to make money at the cost of nature and other people. In fact, electric cars were known as early as the 1880s. It's just that governments rather invested in Russian and Arab oil than in battery technology. Same goes for sustainable energy.
      Transition to renewable energy doesn't mean to simply push some button to shut down every power plant over night. It means governments stop listening to companies such as Shell and, instead, invest money in building the infrastructure of the future. Since every transition is hard and it gets harder the longer you delay it (and we have delayed it for quite some time now), it will probably also come with some cost to the people. We have to stop wasting as much. But, no worries, simply ask your grandparents. They survived with way less.
      We cry about possibly having to save on oil and gas this winter, because of the war. So we might not be able to heat the entire house to 22 °C. My grandparents didn't even have radiators in every room. They had a stove in the kitchen and that was all. When temperatures were low, they sat in the kitchen because all other rooms were cold. They survived. We won't even have to go through such a scenario. Even if we do everything that is suggested to slow down global warming, we would still have more luxury than most generations before us. It is simply that most people are egoistic idiots that wouldn't even accept the slightest curtailment of their privileges or go through the slightest effort to change something. This is why the transition will become hard. And it will become harder, the longer we wait and do nothing. Btw., climate change will cause (and is already causing) starvation, war, and death. In the 20th century, we fought wars over oil to power our economic growth. In the 21st, we'll fight wars over water to save our people from starvation. Times of luxury are over and the later you accept that, the harder it will be and the smaller is the chance we will survive the transition without our living conditions dropping to the level we had during the 14th century bubonic plague pandemic.

  • @filippog6024
    @filippog6024 Месяц назад

    Here in Italy winters are disappearing ( our mountains in the center don’t collect snow anymore) and we have multiples periods of terrible heat during summer. Last year there were 48 Celsius in southern Italy. I’m from Rome and we had 43-44, it was just impossible to stay outside

  • @HaalandViking
    @HaalandViking Год назад

    Latest research about tipping points and the change in AMOC, the currents in Atlantic Ocean between South America and the arctic, show that as the current or water streams slow down because of Greenland and arctic ice melt changes the salinity of water and higher temperature of ocean water and higher temperatures in the arctic, will cause decrease in temperatures of about -10 degrees Celsius, which will cause severe cold winters in UK, north east USA, and northern Europe . Yes, much colder than this past year. The causes of various fast ice ages in these regions was caused by this current change. So, yes, the world will get hotter in most places and the arctic will be warmer in summer, but the cold will be felt in the areas mentioned. A friend just returned from a one month trip to arctic circle. He’s a meteorologist. He said it was very warm the entire time up there,mover 20 degrees Celsius they could swim in the Arctic Ocean and sleep outside. No ice to be seen. So, more severe winter storms and snow is coming to UK, New York, and Germany.

  • @Carshunter99
    @Carshunter99 Год назад +37

    i’m from Córdoba, Andalucía and we have already had 38 days of 40°C+ this summer ‘22… in the shade. so 20 days sounds to me like fvcking heaven

    • @Gk-ug6gu
      @Gk-ug6gu Год назад

      Then add 20 more days compared to current data.

    • @MrYboybo
      @MrYboybo Год назад

      Try Saudi Arabia, u will be glad for ur weather

    • @rvdb8876
      @rvdb8876 Год назад

      Well, since we (humans) are a tropical species, we cannot survive without shelter (home), clothing and/or heating at a temperature lower than 18 degrees (above zero) celcius due to hypothermia.
      In other words, you would not survive the southern Spanish winter without these tools.
      Just stop and think about that for a moment.

    • @Carshunter99
      @Carshunter99 Год назад

      @@rvdb8876 thanks for the remark but literally no one said otherwise

    • @rvdb8876
      @rvdb8876 Год назад

      @@Carshunter99 Well, good that you realize that for a tropical species like us, the cold is more deadly than the heat.

  • @JeffHoneyager
    @JeffHoneyager Год назад +23

    Go nuclear - Small Modular Reactors are extremely safe and affordable - serve 150,000 people in a 10 square acre plot.

    • @simianto9957
      @simianto9957 Год назад +7

      Exactly, we should also invest more in thorium and normalize it

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 Год назад

      Those aren't even working yet they are a false promise.
      Mamy nuclear powerplants had to stop production because of lower water.

    • @JeffHoneyager
      @JeffHoneyager Год назад +5

      @@paxundpeace9970 They are working. NuScale can install right now. The problem is the hyper-regulation from govt. bureaucrats and feckless environmentalists that no nothing about nuclear power generation.

    • @Zack-fu4lo
      @Zack-fu4lo Год назад

      honestly, if global warming is the problem, why dont we just start a nuclear winter? like think for second, itll only be a few years in hazmat suits or underground and the boom, everything should be back to normal.

  • @rayoflight1102
    @rayoflight1102 Год назад +8

    The changes are already noticeable.I live in the west of Ukraine,winter temperatures was coldier 10 years ago, we had even -30 and nowadays it is really hard to see more than -25,but most of the time it even not -20 (this winter I didnt see even -15) Summer became much drier,rains in symmer fall rarely,if temperature in April is quite nice than in May its already hot as hell.Heat period in fall are much increase,and winter starts at the mid og December.

    • @jgnogueira
      @jgnogueira 6 месяцев назад

      Here in brazil the state Rio Grande had the largest season ever and the flood in some cities were dreadfull, this isn't natural

  • @DWilliams-sf5th
    @DWilliams-sf5th 6 месяцев назад

    Why is the beginning chopped?

  • @indianscammer7846
    @indianscammer7846 Год назад +10

    Wtf is this comment section

  • @GjaP_242
    @GjaP_242 Год назад +128

    The whole of Southern Europe could become a desert, according to their study, if the climate continues to warm up. “With 2 degrees of warming, for the Mediterranean we will have a change in the vegetation which has never been known in the past 10,000 years,” said lead author of the study Joel Guiot.
    Source: ZME science

    • @archive4059
      @archive4059 Год назад +19

      I live in Portugal, what i can say about that is, 20, 30 years ago, Alentejo, south region in Portugal was like a desert noadays is full of vegetation with alot of trees, because we built the biggest artifical lake with a dam in europe, what i can say as well is that we dont have really hot days like almost 50ºC like those days, if it happens it is like 1 or 2 days a year, i think we have always to adapt and make the future as greener as possible...

    • @guilhermecruz5194
      @guilhermecruz5194 Год назад +7

      @@archive4059 falou td, mas eu morro de calor aqui

    • @NikauPalmCal
      @NikauPalmCal Год назад +2

      Doubt it will become a dessert probably just semi arid like southern Spain or southern Greece

    • @thekraken1173
      @thekraken1173 Год назад +8

      @@NikauPalmCal Spain does have a desert though.

    • @NikauPalmCal
      @NikauPalmCal Год назад +4

      @@thekraken1173 I know but a dessert biome is different to a dessert climate classification as that's determined by rainfall. While it is a dessert it's not the same as say the Saharan dessert in lack of rain. Also the sea will regulate the coast to stay as a Mediterranean climate for the majority of southern Europe. But there may be some more dessert in already hot areas. I still think most inland areas will be semi arid by then

  • @festo8885
    @festo8885 Год назад +4

    Can't even predict tomorrows weather, let alone 30 years time

    • @loturzelrestaurant
      @loturzelrestaurant Год назад +2

      Ok, so Non-Argument by a Villager, ok.

    • @kaninma7237
      @kaninma7237 8 месяцев назад +2

      Broad climate trends are easier to predict than specific day to day weather events in precise locations.

  • @ianmarsden8568
    @ianmarsden8568 Год назад

    So why does the opening graph start at 1850?

  • @karlos1060
    @karlos1060 Год назад +17

    And still there are plenty of people denying that global warming is real or an issue! I was born in the early 70's and know winters in mid 70's to early 80's to be cold and long lasting with a lot of snow. In the Netherlands were i live we had serious cold winters in 86 and 87 with over minus 20 degrees!
    Now snow is becomming rare and summers are increasinly hotter with less rain. The Netherlands was always a rainy and somewhat colder country but we are rapidly turning into tropical with this speed with long drought inbetween.
    We must act now and stop the global warming. We should less blame what causes it, but focus more on how to solve it. We as humans are capable of it if we want. It will cost time and money, but if we want a future world for our children to live in we have to act now. Countries like China are doing the opposite and polluting at a maximum rate all in search of wealth.
    Greed will be our downfall. Lets hope we wakeup before it's irreversible.

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Год назад +2

      Frankly it’s probably already to late to stop it. All we can do now is try and limit the damage.

    • @OrkunMelihKoksal
      @OrkunMelihKoksal Год назад

      Als jij in de jaren 70 bent geboren weet je ook dat het weer in de jaren 70 veel absurder was dan nu. Het droogste jaar ooit was in de jaren 70. Er waren extreme sneeuwstormen zoals 1979. En in 1975 viel er sneeuw in Juni en Oktober.
      En de winters van 86 en 87 waren belachelijk voor de milde Atlantische klimaat van Nederland

    • @karlos1060
      @karlos1060 Год назад

      @@OrkunMelihKoksal Wat is het punt nu wat je wilt maken? Het gaat over de opwarming van de aarde. Dat is toch precies wat ik zeg en jij onderstreept het ook nog eens door te zeggen dat het een stuk koeler was toen. Dus ik begrijp eerlijk gezegd niet wat je wilt zeggen.

    • @OrkunMelihKoksal
      @OrkunMelihKoksal Год назад

      @@karlos1060 wat ik probeer te zeggen is dat het weer voor de Nederlandse positie op de wereldkaart nu normaler is dan in de jaren 70 en 80

    • @karlos1060
      @karlos1060 Год назад

      @@OrkunMelihKoksal Op zich klopt dat wel, maar vergeet niet dat Nederland ook een wat meer noordelijk land is en daardoor het kouder was. Als je kijkt naar de Scandinavische landen zie je ook de temperaturen steeds verder stijgen. Het ging mij gewoon om het punt dat global warming gewoon een feit is en niet erg fijn. Kijk maar op de temperaturen van de Bilt van de afgelopen 3 eeuwen. Vanaf ik meen 1706 maandelijks bijgehouden. Dan zie je dat de gemiddelde temp over 1 jaar met 2 graden is gestegen en dat de afgelopen 20 jaar het warmste gemiddeld zijn ooit gemeten in 300 jaar.
      Dat zijn gewoon feiten en het is zorgwekkend. We hebben pas weer een hittegolf achter de rug en dat bevestigd mijn punt.

  • @ajithkukumar
    @ajithkukumar 2 года назад +45

    FREE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION IS NEEDED

    • @estebanbolduc
      @estebanbolduc Год назад +4

      And of course the infrastructure that comes with it

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +4

      Ban the elephant in the room, aka the military industrial complex.

    • @borealphoto
      @borealphoto Год назад

      People need to stay home period.

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Год назад +3

      Walkable cities, bikes, free and good public transport and affordable trains!

    • @gamermapper
      @gamermapper Год назад +3

      No cars! No self-driving or electric cars! Only public transport is the solution!

  • @areeyedee
    @areeyedee Год назад +2

    It is always changing but still we need to stop poisoning the earth the way we do. It is always changing but still we need to stop poisoning the earth the way we do. Last year I drove 4 to 5 days a week. Now I drive an average of only once a week and ride my bike. Now let’s imagine everyone cut their driving by 75% WOW what a huge difference that would make, immediately. I sing about starting a civil revolution with change on how we go through our days in my new song You Can SMC We need to make a change and make it now.

  • @astridisaacs8129
    @astridisaacs8129 Месяц назад

    this is gonna end up being like some long lost archive that future civilizations will use in documentarys about the past

  • @ashy969
    @ashy969 Год назад +4

    7 yeara ago when I moved to Helsinki, 25 °C was considered warm summer day. And most days from Nov. 1 to April were snowing heavily. Last winter it was raining most of the time and froze down at nights. While we had above 20 °C almosy all summer. It will be 28 °C today. In middle of august... So I would say, these predictions are very optimistic... Maybe even most of europe will be barely habitable 10 years from now.... How can we make the world actually care?

    • @nenmaster5218
      @nenmaster5218 Год назад +1

      Watch the climate-coverage of Hbomberguy, Some More News,
      Climate-Town, OCC, And Simon Clark. All who are not gloomy
      but also not High-on-Hopium.

    • @somewhereintheworld4325
      @somewhereintheworld4325 Год назад +1

      Who pays you for talking rubbish?

  • @valentinmusteata6592
    @valentinmusteata6592 Год назад +3

    watching this video now, after seeing what is happening the only thing that comes to my mind is that few people which run the world have no interest in even trying for a better future. In other words, human beings are hopeless.

  • @Xyles7
    @Xyles7 Год назад +1

    We're just too many. I will be 53 years old in 2050 and I know that I will look back and think how I could've done more to prevent it.

    • @mayrokratt6195
      @mayrokratt6195 9 месяцев назад

      Maybe we will be too busy fighting cannibals and living in bunkers, trying to escape from scorching heat, searching for clean water and wearing special suits everytime we go outside

  • @SystemScan101
    @SystemScan101 4 месяца назад +3

    Irelands weather hasn’t really changed. Still have a mild winter all year around 🤦‍♂️

  • @macconchradha5324
    @macconchradha5324 Год назад +4

    Ireland seems relatively safe until the chances of hurricanes gose up

  • @RageMup
    @RageMup Год назад +12

    We can do a lot about past emissions (contrary to stated in this video) by capturing them (either by planting more trees or developing technology and infrastructure for it or doing both).

    • @jeremiebihin8150
      @jeremiebihin8150 Год назад +10

      Studies shows that even if we planted trees and forest everywhere it would negate not more than a third of what we emit today. I mean, one third is huge but far from being enough. Trees are helping but its not the solution. And climate change will greatly increase tree mortality overall.
      For technologies capturing CO2, I dont believe in it. We have millions of cars, planes industries and energy plants producing CO2 daily. Imagine how many "CO2 absorbing machines" we would need to offset that. And the amount of electricity that would be necessary.
      Capturing CO2 is great but we can't rely on that, we need to stop emitting it first, very simply

    • @RageMup
      @RageMup Год назад +3

      @@jeremiebihin8150 We definitely need to cut emissions, but still that is not the only field to work on. Capture is a thing. I mean our emissions are enabled by burning captured stuff in hydrocarbons. We even have places to store it all - the same spots where we get our gas and oil out.

    • @percreig
      @percreig Год назад +1

      @@RageMup During years 1000-1300 it was much warmer. Greenland was green. Now its "iceland". Let's hope that we'll get more heat. More plants and grops and no hunger.

    • @infinite7708
      @infinite7708 Год назад

      kids stop worrying if there is a problem our goverment will fix it

    • @thepandaman
      @thepandaman Год назад

      Until we're able to supply 100% of the world's energy needs from renewable energy sources, there's no point in developing CCS at scale as it uses considerable amounts of power (thereby in effect producing emissions), which outweigh the amount of emissions it is able to capture.

  • @raptorx8888
    @raptorx8888 Год назад

    There is huge changing in the scandinavian winter already. In the 90s there could be several snowstorms each winter, while we're just happy is we got any snow at all nowadays.

  • @erwinner8929
    @erwinner8929 Год назад +1

    In Poland like in 2000s there was everywhere snow in the winter going up to 50cm and more, now in winter, there is like 8cm of snow

  • @modiglianilover7721
    @modiglianilover7721 Год назад +15

    I love winters 😔

    • @Koryogden
      @Koryogden Год назад +2

      Better start loving summers too, mmm my car is so hot I can cook eggs on it! Woohoo! /S

  • @smallstudiodesign
    @smallstudiodesign Год назад +14

    The projections for 2050 in this 2021 video are happening *TODAY* in the summer of 2022 … pretty scary

  • @poutsa525
    @poutsa525 7 месяцев назад +2

    My dad owns lands of olives in greece evry summer they grow and in fall you pick them and sell them but this couple of years (in greece) its getting so much hotter now they arent so strong as they were and also sometimes they dont even grow because of the weather

  • @leonardbullhock
    @leonardbullhock 8 месяцев назад +3

    We had our coldest two or three winters in decades there….. Summers are still rubbish in Scotland. Maybe it hasn’t affected us yet.

    • @grindupBaker
      @grindupBaker 7 месяцев назад

      Well Scotland is stubborn of course (and stingy). On the plus side if it's no Scottish it's Crap.

  • @markmuller7962
    @markmuller7962 Год назад +6

    4:56 The London - Barcelona comparison is particularly chilling to listen to in July 2022

    • @zxz1
      @zxz1 8 месяцев назад

      Can't see that working.... London might become like Nantes or Bordeaux ,slightly warmer and wetter and Paris similar , along those lines rather than Istanbul lmao , they always make ridiculous statements ..

    • @markmuller7962
      @markmuller7962 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@zxz1 Europe is by far the region that is warming the fastest of the whole planet, 63% faster then average (and the average includes Europe)

    • @zxz1
      @zxz1 8 месяцев назад

      @@markmuller7962 yes that's true , but that could change ...I am under the impression that while we're getting warmer and sunnier we're also getting a slightly wetter climate going by the Data ...hence I think more cbf still ,we will still be in the same location with Atlantic influence ..I could be wrong

    • @markmuller7962
      @markmuller7962 8 месяцев назад

      @@zxz1 The tropics are very wet

    • @zxz1
      @zxz1 8 месяцев назад

      @@markmuller7962 aren't they just ?

  • @mikelazzara7773
    @mikelazzara7773 Год назад +6

    In my part of Canada the winters are warmer. BUT the summers are shorter and cooler.The growing season is noticeably shorter.

    • @theloniuspunk383
      @theloniuspunk383 Год назад

      the west killed off the european peoples, there is nothing worth saving now, we should destroy planet in any way that is possible to us

    • @pattersonstopmotions1282
      @pattersonstopmotions1282 3 месяца назад

      Sounds like it’s becoming a very temperate mild climate

  • @josealmeida76
    @josealmeida76 Год назад +1

    Why are we forgetting to mention 2 great vulcanic eruptions in Europe (Iceland and Canarias islands) in 2020-21? And about China and India's huge pollution?

  • @europeangardenflower9812
    @europeangardenflower9812 Год назад +1

    Dutch people in general are comfident about their watermanagement skills, but rising sealevels, more extreme rain and droughts and river waterlevels will become a major challenge. With sealevel rise of say 2m the dunes are in danger to wash away and the sea creeps up the rivers quite far. You can't endlessly make the dikes higher. The Netherlands will become a deep bath tub with the rivers laying much higher than the land.

    • @herbayum76
      @herbayum76 6 месяцев назад

      We will invade England when Holland disappears in the sea...on the bright side England will become worldchampion Football again..

  • @hetton569
    @hetton569 Год назад +7

    Western Europe summer 2022 reached 40 degrees in France and set to reach 37 in midland England around Lincoln area...
    This 2050 prediction is looking a lot more like 2030

    • @nutyyyy
      @nutyyyy Год назад

      It was over 40 degrees in England.

    • @Skedaddlemahgaggle
      @Skedaddlemahgaggle Год назад

      40 in the Midlands. You know what people said? "It's just weather/summer". Other people died or got heat stroke from sunbathing. The level of ignorance and stupidity seems to be increasing at the same rate as the temperature.

  • @quickreviewchannel6931
    @quickreviewchannel6931 Год назад +9

    Get on a bicycle and start cycling instead of driving everywhere especially if your fit and healthy and want to go places not to far from your home, for e.g. the local shops, and try plant as many plants as you can! Thanks guys! ❤️❤️❤️

    • @paulo0e
      @paulo0e Год назад +1

      I guess many people just aren't educated enough, or just can't help themselves (lack of sensitivity, empathy?), to see the point. I agree with you, but many still claim their "right" to spend more, have more, discard more, and keep on making stupid decisions, lawmakers included, right? So sad.

    • @quickreviewchannel6931
      @quickreviewchannel6931 Год назад

      @@paulo0e agreed mate

    • @ShrunkedDude
      @ShrunkedDude 6 месяцев назад

      I know. These idiots go on about the environment but yet want to advertise cars and electric cars are pretty much just as bad due to the mining.

  • @yes12337
    @yes12337 11 месяцев назад

    It might be +2 or more, but it also could disrupt jet streams leading to average temperature change within range of -10 to +10 C. Yeah, whatever
    I've seen EU analysis saying there will be less precipitation over most of Europe with potential desertification of some regions. I wonder why this report didn't get more attention as your home turning into a desert sounds like something one would prefer to account for when considering their future.

  • @didierpuzenat7280
    @didierpuzenat7280 Месяц назад +1

    Sadly, 2 years later, the actualized prediction of the French government is a "local warming" of 4 degrees in the best scenario (ie with a global warming of 1.5 degrees). The local warming in France is already of 1.8 degrees in 2023. So it seems to be accelerating, or previous prediction were optimistic. So now we must use resources and time to adapt to 4+ degrees as well as resources and time to prevent further emission. What a mess we made for our children 😓.