As the climate warms, winter cold streaks like late January’s polar outbreak are becoming shorter and rarer, affecting agriculture and winter sports industries that depend on reliable cold https://t.co/MNkuijsY2x
As expected, 2018 was the fourth-hottest year on record globally, and another near-record year for U.S. weather and climate disasters. All of the years on record that were hotter or more disaster-filled came in the past decade https://t.co/nmjS9s8OZW
With a polar outbreak plunging down through the Great Lakes, some cities may be dropping to their coldest temperatures in decades. But how do this week’s extremes compare to the long-term trend? https://t.co/5u3UgYyqrF
In Colorado, the nation’s top winter sports economy, unchecked emissions would cause 34 fewer below-freezing days per year by the 2040-2059 period, compared to the 1981-2010 average https://t.co/ohxBzaIelL
Warming is affecting regional snowfall patterns differently, but from the 1970s to 2010s, 57 of the 107 analyzed weather stations saw the average annual snowfall trend downward by at least an inch https://t.co/AnyKz2YtBK
Warming winters can interfere with winter recreation, crop growth, and pest control. Here's how much they've warmed in your city https://t.co/V5wCYkVXuG
The cool days of late November that come with Thanksgiving will turn warmer on average in the coming decades with climate change https://t.co/NAZESOcIcM See the trends in these cities
Frequently, the food from #Thanksgiving dinner doesn't all get eaten, and while that food often makes for good leftovers, some inevitably gets thrown away https://t.co/Gm94eu03a9 Here's the tie between methane emissions and food