Sunday, July 7, 2024
Weird Stuff

Climate Change Is Behind Weird Rainfall Patterns in Europe – Bloomberg

Bloomberg Surveillance: Early Edition with Francine Lacqua live from London, bringing insight on global markets and the top business stories of the day.
Overnight on Wall Street is morning in Europe. Bloomberg Daybreak Europe, anchored live from London, tracks breaking news in Europe and around the world. Markets never sleep, and neither does Bloomberg News. Monitor your investments 24 hours a day, around the clock from around the globe.
Manager and music executive Ibrahim Hamad takes us on his long journey from meeting a then-unknown rapper named J.Cole in college to becoming his manager to helping him build a label, a festival and a media company as partners.
France’s EDF Delays Restart of Nuclear Reactors in Blow to Energy Supply
European Gas Prices Fluctuate Ahead of Key EU Talks on Price Cap
Fendi Goes Back to School to Save Centuries of Italian Tradition
BOJ to Sit Tight as Markets Weigh Post-Kuroda Path
India’s Economic Activity Looks Set to Slow as Resilience Wanes
Top Hong Kong Market Regulator Urges City to Uphold Rule of Law
Philippines’ Largest Telecom Slumps 17% After Billions of Pesos in Budget Overrun Revealed
Twitter Will Remove Accounts That Link to Other Social Media
Apple Suppliers Accelerate Buildup Outside China, Analysts Say
Musk Poll on Stepping Down as Twitter Chief Leans Toward Yes
Fresh India-Pakistan Feud Erupts Over Hitler-Modi Comparison
Thai Navy Hunts for 31 Sailors Missing at Sea After Ship Sinks
PulteGroup Fires Exec Accused of Defamation By Founder’s Heir
Michael Burry Says Crypto Audits Are ‘Essentially Meaningless’
Jones Snags Lateral on Final Play, Raiders Stun Patriots
Messi Wins World Cup, Argentina Beats France on Penalties
Investors Lose Another Shootout Against the Fed
A 35,000% Stock Market Return in Europe? Here’s How
Therese Raphael’s View to 2023: Sometimes the Future Is Obvious
The Future of Work Is Lunch
Hollywood Loves Its Never-Ending Blizzard of Cheap Christmas Movies
Seven Takeaways From Businessweek’s Cocaine-Smuggling Cover Story
Clinton-Backed Initiative Ships Pfizer Covid Drugs to Africa
Amazon Hit With Strike Campaign in Germany Days Before Christmas
COP15 Adopts Biodiversity Plan to Protect 30% of Land and Water by 2030
Australia Launches Offshore Wind to Move Away From Coal
The (Slowly) Changing Face of Europe’s Mayors
Tech’s Bust Delivers Bruising Blow to Hollowed-Out San Francisco
Young Taiwanese Breathe New Life Into Villages Once Home to War Vets
Crypto.com’s World Cup Win Is Overshadowed by FTX Industry Chaos
Binance, Alone at the Top After FTX, Stirs ‘Too Big to Fail’ Crypto Worry
This Week in Crypto: SBF Arrested (Podcast)
New study shows for the first time that greenhouse gas emissions are directly responsible for extreme rain and dry spells across the continent in winter. 
Residents wade through flood water on a flooded street in Angleur near Liege, Belgium in July 2021.

Subscriber Benefit
Subscribe
Sign In
Emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases caused by human activities are directly responsible for long-term dry conditions in the Mediterranean basin and the increasing rainfall over the rest of Europe during winter, according to a study by the UK’s Met Office. 
The research, published in Journal of Climate, is the first to show the direct link between seasonal rainfall trends in Europe and climate change, the Met Office said in a statement. Scientists compared climate scenarios with and without human influence. 

source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *