Here we are just a couple of weeks into 2016 and we already know that last year was the
second-warmest on record in the continental United States (the winner so far being 2012); the month of December was a U.S.
record-breaker for heat and also precipitation; and it’s assumed that, when the final figures come in later this month, 2015 will prove to be the hottest year on record globally. Even before this news is confirmed, we know that
14 of the 15 warmest years on record have occurred in the twenty-first century which, at least to me, looks ominously like a pattern. And
early expectations are that this year will top last, with the help of a continuing
monster El Niño event in the overheating waters of the Pacific that has only added to the impact of global warming and to
fierce weather around the world. Everywhere it seems increasingly possible to see the signs of climate change: the
melting Arctic; the destabilizing ice sheets in both the
Antarctic and
Greenland; the already
rising sea levels that are someday destined to submerge
major coastal cities; the disappearing
glaciers(and so, in
some regions, endangered water supplies); monster typhoons; severe droughts; and the
burning that goes with a globally
expanding fire season; the — in a word —
extremityof it all.
With 2015 in the history books, it’s easy enough to think of our changing weather as part of that history, but that would be a mistake. Climate change, if allowed to come to full fruition, will be something else altogether — not history, but the possible end of it. History, after all, is something we’re generally familiar with.
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