jilievo online gaming fortune88PARIS — A white Christmas may increasingly become a nostalgic memory as the Northern Hemisphere sees ever fewer snowy winter days due to climate change, with Europe warming quickest, a report warned on Tuesday. Driven primarily by humanity’s mass burning of fossil fuels, that decline in days below freezing threatens tourism, the economy and cultures, according to Climate Central. Article continues after this advertisementTuesday’s report by the US-based research institute argues that manmade climate change had caused more than a third of the 123 countries and nearly half of the 901 cities studied to lose the equivalent of at least a week’s worth of days below freezing — zero degrees Celsius or 32 degrees Fahrenheit — over a decade. FEATURED STORIES GLOBALNATION Myanmar nationals stranded in Zambales long to go home GLOBALNATION Indonesia exec: Veloso homecoming on Dec. 18 GLOBALNATION American chestnuts are almost goneREAD: As Arctic climate warms, even Santa runs short of snow The report’s analysis is based on the daily minimum temperatures covering the months of December to February — roughly the span of the Northern Hemisphere winter — from 2014 to 2023. Article continues after this advertisementThose lows were then compared to a simulation of a climate without the warming effects of humanity’s widespread use of coal, oil and gas. Article continues after this advertisementIt found that climate change had particularly increased the number of winter days above zero in Europe, the world’s fastest-warming continent. Article continues after this advertisementDenmark and the Baltic states were the countries most affected. READ: Christmas passes ‘like a typical day’ in Germany Article continues after this advertisement“The snow, ice, and chilly temperatures that used to be hallmarks of the winter season are fast disappearing in many places, threatening ecosystems, economies, and cultural traditions,” said Climate Central’s vice president for science Kristina Dahl. “Freezing winter days are crucial for sustaining snow and ice for winter recreation and sports, replenishing the snowpack that supplies freshwater sources, and maintaining plant, animal, and insect life cycles,” Dahl added. Cold weather helps to control populations of disease-carrying insects such as mosquitoes and ticks, while shorter winters encourage the spread of pollen — and therefore allergies. Subscribe to our daily newsletter Compared with a year ago, the debt load increased by 8.4 percent, or an additional P1.2-trillion debt in August. The study also warned that hotter winters may also affect agriculturejilievo online gaming, particularly the cultivation of fruits which require prolonged cool periods such as apples and peaches. READ NEXT Catching holiday blues instead of cheer? Here are ways to find... Trump, White House spar over northeast US mystery drones EDITORS' PICK 14 years on death row: Timeline of Mary Jane Veloso’s fight for justice PhilHealth assures benefits to continue even without 2025 subsidy P45,000 bonus for Cebu Capitol workers granted Yearend Special: Top trending showbiz stories of 2024 LPA to become tropical cyclone; bring rain in Visayas, Mindanao Dec 17 MOST READ AFP: Yearend WPS resupply, Noche Buena delivery missions successful PRC: 3,058 passed CPA licensure exam Dec 2024 End the export of Filipinos Alice Guo, family slapped with falsification, anti-dummy law raps Follow @FMangosingINQ on Twitter --> View comments |