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News & Features
2801-2810 of 3203 results
Natural variability in Earth's reflectiveness would limit our ability to detect effects of climate engineering
Michon Scott |
March 26, 2014
How much sunlight Earth reflects naturally varies a lot. The bigger the range of natural variability, the greater the odds that any evidence of a manmade effort to brighten up the planet would be lost in the “background noise.”
2014 Spring Climate Outlook
March 20, 2014
On March 20, 2014, NOAA's National Weather Service issued its Spring Outlook, covering flooding, drought, temperature, and precipitation through June. A cold and snowy winter in the northern plains and Midwest has raised the potential for moderate flooding, but fortunately no areas are in major flood risk this year.
Climate forecast training for international meteorologists
March 19, 2014
Climate change is a global phenomenon, affecting weather events around the world. Therefore, people around the globe need climate information to anticipate potentially damaging floods, droughts, crop and pest conditions, and disease outbreaks. For 20 years, the scientists at the International Desks of NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center have provided climate outlooks for weeks and months into the future and trained visiting meteorologists to translate climate data into information that can help decision makers in different parts of the world.
Future Flood Zones for New York City
Caitlyn Kennedy |
March 18, 2014
If mid-century projections of sea level rise prove true for New York City, four times as many people may be living in the 100-year floodplain than were previously estimated based only on observed changes.
Data Snapshots: February 2014 Average Temperature
LuAnn Dahlman |
March 14, 2014
Average temperatures across the contiguous United States in February ranged from frigid to balmy.
Winter of 2013-14 already tops 2012-13 for number of hurricane-force storms in North Atlantic
Rebecca Lindsey |
March 13, 2014
The North Atlantic has spawned an unusually high number of hurricane-force storms this winter, already surpassing last winter's total—and the season isn't over yet.
The day before yesterday: when abrupt climate change came to the Chesapeake Bay
Michael W. Fincham |
March 07, 2014
In October 2003, a little-known think tank in the Department of Defense quietly released a report warning that climate change could happen so suddenly it could pose a major threat to our country's national security. Why was the Pentagon worried about abrupt climate change? Because new evidence from Greenland showed it had happened before.
How drought affects carbon balance in the Amazon
March 06, 2014
The Amazon Rainforest is a living warehouse for carbon dioxide. As climate changes, the lush tropical ecosystems of the Amazon Basin may release more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than they absorb. NOAA scientist John Miller talks about how climate conditions in 2010 and 2011 created a natural experiment on how drought affects the Amazon's carbon balance.
Using climate data to protect growers and ranchers
March 05, 2014
Working with private companies, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Risk Management Agency uses precipitation data from NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center as part of an insurance program for ranchers and those who grow hay or other livestock forage. This video describes how it works.
Heavy downpours more intense, frequent in a warmer world
Caitlyn Kennedy |
March 04, 2014
According to the 2009 National Climate Assessment, heavy downpours have increased in frequency and intensity during the last 50 years. Models predict that downpours will become still more more frequent and intense as greenhouse gas emissions and the planet’s temperature continue to rise.
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