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Autor
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Tema: Mal hivern en altres contrades del món (Llegit 252 vegades)
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Gerard Taulé
Cumulonimbus Incus
  
Desconnectat
Missatges: 7502
El meteofanàtic de la illa de calor gironina
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Menys mal que no som els únics llocs amb poc fred. "Mal de muchos consuelo de tontos".
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Salt (Gironès), 84 m 15,4º, 750 mm, 41º i -7,8º Blog "El clima i la meteorologia" gerardtaule.blogspot.com www.acom.esLa meteorologia és la sal de la vida del meteofanàtic
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Profesor Bacterio
Cumulonimbus Calvus
 
Desconnectat
Missatges: 3511

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el Niño, ... peça clau aquest hivern?

XINA:
SHANGHAI experienced the warmest winter since record keeping began in 1873, meteorological experts said yesterday.
The blame - or the credit, depending on your point of view - was pinned on a strong "El- Nino," a disruption of the ocean atmospheric system in the tropical Pacific. Contributing factors included weather patterns around the North Pole that weakened local cold fronts and more active warm, moist systems from the southwest.
The average temperature in Shanghai from December through February was 7.3 degrees Celsius, 2.3 degrees higher than usual, the Shanghai Meteorological Bureau said.
In the downtown alone, the average was 8.1 degrees, 2.6 degrees above normal.
The city experienced only 14 days when average temperatures fell below zero, the second-fewest in weather history. The downtown shivered through only four such days, the bureau said.
"In the winter of 2000-2001, the city had 13 days with minus-zero temperatures," said Xu Jialiang, an engineer at the bureau's climate center.
China went through a comparatively warm winter as well, with an overall average of 2.6 degrees below zero, 1.8 degrees higher than normal.
The conditions that caused the mild winter could also bring a hot summer, the weather experts said. But, they pointed out, one warm season doesn't always follow another.
"In 1999, which had the second-warmest winter in history, the city had only one summer day when the temperature rose above 35 degrees," Xu said.
Given the recent warm spell, the start of spring may be announced soon. Spring is declared when the average temperature exceeds 10 degrees for five straight days.
Temperatures on Wednesday ranged between 9.8 and 17.2 degrees and ran from 12 to 15 degrees yesterday.
Temperatures through Sunday are expected to range between 12 and 18 degrees.
Rain is forecast for the next three days, including the Lantern Festival, which falls on Sunday and ends the Spring Festival.
http://www.shanghaidaily.com/sp/article/2007/200703/20070302/article_307611.htm
THE warmest winter so far in Shanghai has left the city, setting a new record of 8.2 degrees Celsius, the highest average daily temperature in the city's recorded winter history, Shanghai Meteorological Bureau said today.
Average temperatures from December to February broke the record of 7.9 degrees Celsius, which was set in 1999, and became the warmest winter in a century ever since the city had weather records, said Lei Xiaotu, chief of Shanghai Climate Center under the bureau.
The average daily temperature last December was 1.9 degrees Celsius higher above normal while statistics also showed a 1.6 degrees Celsius climb in January, Lei said.
El Nino, a phenomenon that has changed weather patterns around the world, was partly to blame for the warmest winter, which was the 19th "warm winter" in Shanghai, said Xu Jialiang, a senior researcher in the center.
If average temperatures in the region from December to February are higher than that in 30 years, the winter can then be defined as a "warm winter," according to the National Climate Center.
Under the wing of El Nino, temperatures around the Yangtze River Region this winter were higher than usual, which attributed to the new record in the city, Xu said, adding that weak cold fronts from northern China was another main factor.
Experts in the center said they are now keeping a close eye on the influence the warm winter may have on the coming weather, adding that there may be more abnormal weather this summer.
This warm winter may bring about the early maturing of crops and plants and heighten insects like mosquitoes to overabundant breeding around harbors, according to the center.
As the city gets warmer, flowers in Shanghai have began to bloom early. Sakuras and gardenias have bloomed at the Shanghai Botanic Garden 15 to 20 days ahead of their normal flowering season, officials at the garden said yesterday.
The weather has also created problems for the Peach Blossom Festival in Nanhui District, which is held at the end of March or the beginning of April every year.
Average temperatures nationwide also jumped by 1.8 degrees Celsius from 4.4 degrees Celsius minus zero this winter, according to the National Meteorological Center. Temperatures in northeastern China, such as Beijing, Jilin, Heilongjiang and Liaoning provinces, also reported record-high average temperatures this winter.
http://www.shanghaidaily.com/article/?id=307534&type=Metro
JAPÓ:
Japan has warmest winter ever!
TOKYO: Japan has had the warmest winter ever and central Tokyo has seen no snow so far — the first time since records began, the official weather forecaster said on Friday. “We have never seen a year without snow in the central Tokyo area. We started taking snow records in 1877,” an official with Japan’s Meteorological Agency said. “If central Tokyo does not see snow before long, it will be for the first time since then.”
The agency said nationwide average temperatures for the three months from December 2006 to February 2007 matched the previous highs in the December 1948-February 1949 period. It started recording nationwide average temperatures in 1899.
“Behind the record high temperature in the 2007 winter in Japan, there might be an impact of global warming due to an increase in (emissions of) greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide,” the agency said on its Web site.
Northern Japan, where skiers are used to see mountains packed high with snow, had just a light sprinkling this winter.
Temperatures are likely to stay normal or higher than usual next week in most of Japan and then might drop to normal March levels the following week, the agency forecast.
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/20070302TDY03003.htm
http://www.indiaenews.com/asia/20070301/41578.htm
EUROPA:
Txèquia.
Czech winter probably warmest in last 85 years by Prague Daily Monitor/ČTK / published 2 March 2007
Prague, March 1 (CTK) - Czechs have probably been experiencing the warmest winter in the last 85 years as December, January and February were extremely warm, the Czech Hydrometeorological Institute (CHMU) writes on its website today.
However, it cannot yet be said whether the winter, coming to its end, will be the warmest since 1961 when exact temperature measurements began.
Last November and this January have been the warmest since 1961, the institute writes.
This February was by 3.7 degrees Centigrade warmer than the average temperature measured at this time of the year.
Some experts assume that 2007 could be the warmest year ever due to global warming and the El Nino climate cycle. Until now, the warmest year has been 1998.
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Guissona - La Segarra
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ipj
Cumulus Humilis
   
Desconnectat
Missatges: 375
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No me digáis que esto no es de nuevo para aco*onarse.
Y bueno, podemos intuir como nos puede afectar la evolución del niño: poco frío, poca nieve... pero mucha agua (en Madrid, al menos, he recogido bastante, excepto en Enero, así que no me puedo quejar)
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Pàgines: [1]
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