Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Post-Copenhagen quest for global warming accord stuck in reverse - CSMonitor.com
If the size of the current UN negotiating text is any indication, the process to have been thrown into reverse – at least for now.

"The frustrating thing about the past week in Bonn is that the text doubled in size again," says Andrew Deutz, senior policy advisor for UN affairs at the Nature Conservancy. "If you want to get an agreement on the text by Cancun, we should be narrowing, rather than expanding."
BBC News - Climate change 'partly to blame' for sweltering Moscow
"Circulation anomalies tend to create warm and cool anomalies: while it has been very hot in western Russia, it has been cooler than average in adjacent parts of Siberia that lie on the other side of the high pressure system where Arctic air is being drawn southwards.
...
"For example, we have never had as many regions in Russia affected by malaria, and the same goes for ticks carrying encephalitis. This is because winters are becoming much warmer, and less and less of these organisms die during the freezing periods."
March 2010: Russia's top weatherman says winter in Siberia may be coldest on record -- Signs of the Times News
n a new blow to the climate change lobby, Russia's top weatherman today announced that the winter now drawing to a close in Siberia may turn out to be the coldest on record.

'The winter of 2009-10 was one of the most severe in European part of Russia for more than 30 years, and in Siberia it was perhaps the record breaking coldest ever,' said Dr Alexander Frolov, head of state meteorological service Rosgidromet.

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