Report says climate change made rainfall heavier but human factors turned extreme weather into humanitarian disaster
Carbon pollution led to heavier rains and stronger floods in Greece and Libya this month but other human factors were responsible for “turning the extreme weather into a humanitarian disaster”, scientists have said.
Global heating made the levels of rainfall that devastated the Mediterranean in early September up to 50 times more likely in Libya and up to 10 times more likely in Greece, according to a study from World Weather Attribution that used established methods but had not yet been peer-reviewed.
More Stories
As cyberwarfare threat looms, cashless Nordic nations go back to banknotes | Miranda Bryant
‘All the birds returned’: How a Chinese project led the way in water and soil conservation
Macron says Russia’s permission not needed to deploy troops in Ukraine