ttystikk
Well-Known Member
That just sounds miserable.I went hiking yesterday. Even with the cold wind and rain. It didn't start for real until about 2000, but rained most of the rest of the night. Didn't really get wet hiking out this morning, but some of my gear did. I took a long hot shower as soon as I got back over here to work. And all my tarps, tent and whatnot are spread out in the cookshed to dry.
At 1515 it's cloudy, 48F with 79% humidity. Forecast high/low of 48/42F with 60% chance of rain this afternoon, {and 100% tonight} 10 day high/low of 67/31F with rain today and tomorrow, then sun for a while.
It's finally stopped below freezing here, dropped to the high teens overnight before warming up to the thirties. It isn't supposed to freeze at all tonight, however.
I heard a good point made about global warming the other day; it's not that what we're seeing is 'the new normal', but rather that it's 'the new baseline'.
I think things will be accelerating from here, leading to ever more change, ever more rapidly.
Germany, a nation 1/4 the size of America, has spent $200 billion since 2000 switching its electrical power generation from fossil fuels to renewables. They've made excellent progress and recently shut down their last coal mine.
Meanwhile, America has been spending an average of $20 billion a year since then (doing the math, that's $340 billion) subsidising our fossil fuel industry.
Even with that, we've reduced CO2 emissions from power generation by over 24% and now it's less than that emitted by our transportation sector.