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Britain shivers in 'ridiculously low' temperatures
London (AFP) Nov 28, 2010 Parts of Britain experienced record low temperatures overnight, including minus 17 Celsius in Wales, forecasters said Sunday amid warnings of more heavy snow to come. "You are seeing some ridiculously low temperatures -- it has been a bit like it is in the middle of Scandinavia," said weather forecaster Michael Dukes. The temperature in Llysdinam near Llandrindod Wells in Wales plunged to minus 17.3C -- the principality's lowest ever temperature for November and Britain's coldest for the month since 1985. The Met Office, Britain's national forecaster, issued severe weather warnings Sunday for large chunks of eastern and southern Scotland and eastern England, warning of heavy snowfalls. Ireland also experienced heavy snow and Dublin airport was disrupted, with Finance Minister Brian Lenihan among those delayed as the weather made him late for crucial EU talks in Brussels on an international bailout for his country. Drivers have been urged to be careful in badly-hit areas, and roadside emergency firms in Britain reported a huge surge in calls for help. The weather has also disrupted several sporting events -- Dundee United's match against Rangers in Scotland's Premier League was abandoned and several FA Cup second round fixtures were postponed. Parts of Scotland and north-east England have already seen well over a foot (30 centimetres) of snow since the start of the cold snap last week, and forecasters said the flurries could reach London in the coming days. Britain's lowest ever recorded temperature in November was minus 23.3 Celsius in Braemar, in the Scottish Highlands, on November 14, 1919. The unusual weather has been caused by high pressure over Greenland and low pressure in the Baltic, forcing cold winds from the north-east across Europe.
U.K: 2010 temps near record high as snow comes early The hottest year on record so far has been 1998, when a strong El Nino, a warming event in the Pacific, pushed up temperatures, the BBC reported. This year saw a weaker El Nino, and scientists say that should have meant substantially lower temperatures than 1998, but that has not been the case. Temperatures in the last 12 months are the warmest recorded by NASA and the second highest in the United Kingdom's data set, the U.K. Met Office said. "It's a sign that we've got man-made global warming," Vicky Pope, head of climate science advice at the Met Office, says. Although the rate of warming has slowed over the last decade, the Met Office says that is due to natural variability, not because man-made warming has stopped. Pope says she expects warming to increase in the next few years. "The long-term warming trend is 0.16 C (0.3 F)," she says. "In the last 10 years the rate decreased to between 0.05 C (0.09 F) and 0.13 C (0.23 F)."
earlier related report More than 120 leaders jetted to the Danish capital, expecting to bless a pact that would slow, halt and then reverse the threat to Earth's climate system. Instead, they were plunged into a nightmare where they had to haggle over a horribly complex, fiercely disputed deal as the clock ticked away. Face was saved by the "Copenhagen Accord," cobbled together by a couple of dozen leaders, setting an aim of limiting warming to two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) but lacking key details about how to achieve it. Shocked and widely ridiculed, the 194 parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) have since then taken a low-key, unfailingly pragmatic tack. In a sign thereof, Cancun will end with talks at ministerial level, not heads of state or government. "One of the things that is at stake in Cancun is the legitimacy and credibility of the UN process," said Elliot Diringer of the US thinktank, the Pew Center on Global Climate Change. "If you have a second failure in the process, you may see parties start to withdraw from the process. I don't mean from the (UN Framework) Convention (on Climate Change), but to begin to look elsewhere for making progress." Frustrated by the snail's pace and labyrinthine meanderings, countries could be lured by smaller, nimbler fora such as the G20, he said. They could also be tempted to launch sectoral negotiations that cover specific carbon-spewing industries, such as power, transport and steelmaking. In the new post-Copenhagen age, there is no expectation of sealing a post-2012 treaty in Cancun, and talk of wrapping it all up in South Africa at the end of 2011 has also been sidelined. Indeed, bolder minds do not even want to pronounce the "T" word, given the task of stitching together an all-embracing treaty stuffed with so many connected issues, with every risk that it could be unravelled by national interests. Instead, the new approach is to secure visible progress on separate operational issues and then ratchet up these measures, bit by bit, in successive rounds of talks. "One of the big lessons from Copenhagen that countries have actually learned from themselves is that there is no such thing as one all-encompassing solution," UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres told reporters this month. "They also seem to be setting out to develop the building blocks upon which they can build realistic action on the ground, because countries really need results on the ground right now." A European negotiator said the new credo was "bottom up" (progress on the ground) as opposed to "top down," or a treaty. "There are big weaknesses in it, but it's political reality and we have to deal with it," he said. Cancun could unlock action in several important areas, he said. The one likeliest to make headlines is the launch, even symbolic, of a so-called "Green Fund" to help poor, climate-vulnerable countries. It could be the main vehicle for aid, promised by rich countries in Copenhagen, that could reach as much as 100 billion dollars a year by 2020. Another area of progress is a deal on financial help to prevent tropical deforestation. Logging and conversion of forests to agriculture or habitation accounts for 12 percent of greenhouse-gas emissions. The prospects for dealmaking remain troubled, though, by tensions between China and the United States, the world's No 1. and No. 2 emitters, who between them account for 41 percent of all fossil-fuel carbon pollution. China is irked by US demands to submit its emissions pledges to international scrutiny, even though Washington's own emissions plans are unambitious and at threat from conservatives in Congress. At UNFCCC talks in Tianjin in October, China's chief climate negotiator, Su Wei, likened the US stance to "a pig looking in a mirror" and finding itself beautiful. "Both the US and China are doing their best that in the event of a failure, it will be the other who gets blamed," said Diringer.
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Heavy snow hits roads, airports in Britain London (AFP) Nov 27, 2010 Parts of Britain were on Saturday blanketed in up to 35 centimetres (13 inches) of snow, causing air and road disruption, in the earliest widespread snowfall for 17 years. Temperatures plunged as low as minus eight degrees Celsius (17 degrees Fahrenheit) in the Scottish Highlands and minus seven degrees Celsius (19 degrees Fahrenheit) in central England overnight Friday and forecasters on Sa ... read more |
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