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Federal climate report predicting hot, dry, fiery future for Prairies

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    Federal climate report predicting hot, dry, fiery future for Prairies

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/prairies-warming-faster-than-other-parts-of-canada-1.5832328 https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/prairies-warming-faster-than-other-parts-of-canada-1.5832328

    U of R report says the prairies are warming faster than other parts of southern Canada
    CBC News · Posted: Dec 08, 2020 6:49 AM CT | Last Updated: December 8

    The report says southern grasslands and central parklands will spread north. The boreal forest will shrink and some alpine ecosystems are likely to disappear entirely. (Canadian Press)

    Scientists are predicting a hot, dry and fiery future for the Prairies.

    "In a warming climate, you can expect extreme weather events to occur with increased severity," said Dave Sauchyn, a professor at the University of Regina and a lead author in an extensive report released Monday by Natural Resources Canada.

    It's the first in an expected series rounding up the latest research on climate change and its impacts and applying that to different regions of the country.

    The Prairies report begins with a warning that the West is warming the quickest of any area in southern Canada and that those effects are already being seen.

    "In winter, much of Western Canada is warming at three times the global rate," Sauchyn said.
    Prairies will see increased drought

    The look of the West can be expected to change. The report says southern grasslands and central parklands will spread north. The boreal forest will shrink and some alpine ecosystems are likely to disappear entirely.

    Aspen trees are already growing 200 metres higher up mountain slopes as they take advantage of that vanishing habitat.

    Overall precipitation is likely to increase, but only in the spring and fall, leading to shoulder-season floods and summer droughts.

    "Almost none of the future scenarios include sufficient increases in precipitation to compensate for the drying effect of warmer temperatures," the report says.

    "The worst-case future scenario for the Prairie provinces is the reoccurrence of consecutive years of severe drought, such as those that occurred in the 1930s."

    Extreme weather events

    Some impacts are already here in the form of extreme weather events.

    The report says 13 of the 20 most costly weather-related disasters since 1983, when record-keeping began, happened on the Prairies.

    Recent research suggests climate change has increased the risk of extreme fires in Western Canada by a factor of between 1.5 and 6.

    "These events occurred with somewhat greater severity because they were occurring in a warmer climate," Sauchyn said.

    The figures don't tell the whole story. Droughts, which don't show up in tallies of insured losses, have cost billions of dollars in lost or unplanted crops.

    In years with adequate rainfall, some crops are predicted to do well under climate change.

    Spring wheat, the biggest crop in the West, could see yields increase anywhere from eight to 37 per cent in the next 50 years, depending on action against greenhouse gases. Canola, the second biggest crop, would be likely to decline by about the same amount.
    Water management a critical issue

    Water management is going to become a critical issue, especially in the southern plains.

    "There is some response [from governments], but it's more of a reaction," Sauchyn said. "What we advocate is more proactive, more of a planning approach."

    He suggested governments should be cautious of new, water-intensive industries planned for southern watersheds, such as the renewed push for coal mining in southern Alberta.

    "Any kind of development has to be viewed through a climate change lens," Sauchyn said.

    "It just seems due diligence these days that any kind of a proposal be evaluated for its climate risks. If I was a shareholder in a mining company, I would want to know if there's sufficient water in the future."

    #2
    https://changingclimate.ca/regional-perspectives/chapter/4-0/ https://changingclimate.ca/regional-perspectives/chapter/4-0/


    Chapter 4
    Prairie Provinces

    This chapter discusses climate change impacts and approaches to adaptation across the three Prairies Provinces.

    Comment


      #3
      FJ. Please post that info again about how every place on the planet is warming faster than every place on the planet. Lol

      Comment


        #4
        Wasn't last year the lowest number of forest fires in Saskatchewan in a decade...

        There was no smoke to save the canola crop?????

        Comment


          #5
          Heard sask is warming the fastest on planet?
          We will be the new get away for the snow birds.

          Comment


            #6
            So if you google "warming three times faster" you get articles pointing to the Antarctic, Arctic, Australia and parts of Western Canada are all "warming three times faster then the rest of the world".

            Which poses the question, is Saskatchewan warming three times faster then normal faster? Or three times faster then three times faster?

            Comment


              #7
              I truly feel bad for those who live in constant fear in today’s society. Climate change, controllovirus, guns, white males, heterosexual leaning people, hole in the ozone, plastic, gmos, tough words to China, two gender believers.

              Oh, and Harper and Trump.

              There is just so much to be feared.

              What a way to live. I truly feel bad. It must be debilitating.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Jay-mo View Post
                So if you google "warming three times faster" you get articles pointing to the Antarctic, Arctic, Australia and parts of Western Canada are all "warming three times faster then the rest of the world".

                Which poses the question, is Saskatchewan warming three times faster then normal faster? Or three times faster then three times faster?
                Oh. Thanks for the hearty chuckle this beautiful, cool, winter morning. Ahem, I mean, hot, dry, snowless, and fiery morning where we used to have winter in December.
                Last edited by Sheepwheat; Dec 10, 2020, 09:09.

                Comment


                  #9
                  There are certainly a great number of Kermits on this site. I hope the forecast is wrong but the last three years have been dry and hot. Weather or climate , time will tell.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                    There are certainly a great number of Kermits on this site. I hope the forecast is wrong but the last three years have been dry and hot. Weather or climate , time will tell.
                    Maybe you missed the scientific evidence that the smoke from forest fires saved the crop in either 2018 or 2017

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                      There are certainly a great number of Kermits on this site. I hope the forecast is wrong but the last three years have been dry and hot. Weather or climate , time will tell.
                      Lots of the prairies would wonder Wtf you are talking about
                      As comrade chuck would say. Your weather in your little corner is not the whole pic

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                        There are certainly a great number of Kermits on this site. I hope the forecast is wrong but the last three years have been dry and hot. Weather or climate , time will tell.
                        Does that make the other side Piggys? Kermit seems to be the level headed one in the bunch!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                          There are certainly a great number of Kermits on this site. I hope the forecast is wrong but the last three years have been dry and hot. Weather or climate , time will tell.
                          Where? Everywhere? Hot? Last time it was hot here, it was 1988. My sister and I were playing catch and it was 38 degrees. That was the day this farm (and climate station), set it’s all time high record. Since then, 30 is a rare thing. One day a year, max.

                          And dry? Lol. Last time it was dry here was, um, well, you’d have to ask the Indians who were here before us, because dry?

                          Backyarditis affects us all. But please don’t slap the rest of us who wish it was warmer and drier. The prairies are a big and diverse place. Using that time honoured snapshot in time, does not cut it for us deniers according to you, so why does it cut it when you use it?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by Sheepwheat View Post
                            FJ. Please post that info again about how every place on the planet is warming faster than every place on the planet. Lol


                            Political threads get chicken pictures. Global warming threads should all get these type of pictures.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by flea beetle View Post
                              Does that make the other side Piggys? Kermit seems to be the level headed one in the bunch!
                              No, more like Dr. Bunsen Honeydew. Whose science is always wrong(but confidence never waivers), and results in poor Beaker suffering some painful fate every single time.
                              Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Dec 10, 2020, 11:15.

                              Comment

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