Why is the temperature in Siberia, the coldest in the world, constantly rising?
Moscow, July 22, 2020, Wednesday
As soon as the name Siberia is mentioned, the image of freezing cold comes to mind. Siberia, one of the coldest regions in the world, is 600 times more likely to experience heat waves. The snow in Siberia is also about to melt due to the greenhouse effect. A team of researchers studied Siberian meteorological data from January to June 2020, including a day when temperatures reached 38 degrees. Temperatures in Siberia typically range from 10 to 17 degrees. Scientists from Britain, Russia, the Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland joined the study on the impact of global warming on Siberia.
These scientists, based on about 70 different models, explained that global warming would not have had such a dangerous effect if it were not for man-made pollution such as coal, oil and gas fuels. The change that has taken place in Siberia due to climate change happens once in 80 thousand years hence the very big event of climate change. Andrew, a scientist with the British Meteorological Department, was involved in the research. He believed that human intervention was responsible for the current climate change in Siberia. The current weather conditions in Siberia have never been seen before. Temperatures in Siberia are as high as 9 degrees for the first 6 months. The Russian city of Varkhoysk, known for its low temperatures, has also been experiencing rising temperatures for some time.
The math of the extra heat in Siberia is also understandable. Permofrost causes oil to leak when crude oil pipes burst in the cold, leaving the ground beneath it to emit additional greenhouse gases that cause global warming. According to Russia's PP Shirshov Institute of Oceanography, the situation in Siberia is worrying. Since this research has been done with great precision, there is no reason to disbelieve in it, the leaders of the countries of the world have to forget their differences and come into action by thinking seriously about global warming.
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