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Michaels: Comfort of heating planet makes environmental action more difficult

This apparent one off felt a lot like an extension of the boiling planet theme that含羞草研究社檚 been dominating headlines in the last year.

Summer含羞草研究社檚 heat came early, prompting Kelowna residents young and old to gleefully shed layers of clothes and wander about the city in nearly their natural state.

含羞草研究社淟ook, that man has no shirt on!含羞草研究社 my three-year-old said at least a dozen times when sun-inspired fellas ran down the sidewalk basking in the splendour of the non-summer含羞草研究社檚 day that was Wednesday.

含羞草研究社淪ome people think the clothes don含羞草研究社檛 make the man, sweetie. Those people are wrong,含羞草研究社 I said.

OK, I just thought that. It will be years until he has to know that the summer sartorial selections of Okanaganites brings on an annual eye-roll induced headache hotter than the sun. So I shoved my words down and they festered alongside another repressed feeling I was dealing with.

This weather含羞草研究社t含羞草研究社檚 kind of strange, isn含羞草研究社檛 it?

And not entirely good-strange. According to Environment Canada meteorologist Lisa Coldwells, the warm stretch came courtesy of a ridge of high pressure built up in the Baja area. It floated north, bringing with it hot, hot heat. It was an El Nino unlike anything seen since 1997.

But, of course, this apparent one off felt a lot like an extension of the boiling planet theme that含羞草研究社檚 been dominating headlines in the last year.

A news item out of Nasa in March was one that really got my attention. According to their data, it was the most anomalously hot month the Earth has seen since record keeping began含羞草研究社攆ully 1.35 C warmer than the average from 1951 to 1980.

People more educated on the subject than me were actually alarmed. 含羞草研究社淭his result is a true shocker, and yet another reminder of the incessant long-term rise in global temperature resulting from human-produced greenhouse gases,含羞草研究社漨eteorologists Jeff Masters and Bob Henson wrote on their blog, Weather Underground.

A shocker, yet, getting warmer isn含羞草研究社檛 actually shocking. For many, according to a paper published Thursday on Nature.com含羞草研究社攁n international weekly journal of science含羞草研究社攚armer winters and longer summers are actually considered a good thing.

含羞草研究社淗ere we show that in the United States from 1974 to 2013, the weather conditions experienced by the vast majority of the population improved. Using previous research on how weather affects local population growth to develop an index of people含羞草研究社檚 weather preferences, we find that 80 per cent of Americans live in counties that are experiencing more pleasant weather than they did four decades ago,含羞草研究社 reads the report summary from  Patrick J. Egan & Megan Mullin.

含羞草研究社淰irtually all Americans are now experiencing the much milder winters that they typically prefer, and these mild winters have not been offset by markedly more uncomfortable summers or other negative changes.含羞草研究社

Like anything, however, the good times will end.Mullin and Egan wrote that climate change models predict that US summers will eventually warm more than winters and if greenhouse gas emissions grow at an unabated rate, an estimated 88 per cent of the US public will experience weather at the end of the century that is far less enjoyable.

But, how do you break through the 含羞草研究社渋t含羞草研究社檚 nice outside含羞草研究社 mindset that causes inaction? I含羞草研究社檓 hoping  that decades down the line, my little human doesn含羞草研究社檛 ask me why, despite all the many warnings, we didn含羞草研究社檛 save ourselves. I also hope Kelowna residents start wearing clothes when the sun comes out.





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