Climate change made UK's soggy winter even wetter, study finds

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The wetter weather is disrupting football matches, flooding farms and sewers and pushing up food prices, according to report author Dr Friederike Otto. She says the solutions to climate change will 'make life cheaper'.

The wet weather in the UK and Ireland that seemed almost unrelenting last winter was made worse by climate change, scientists have said. October 2023 to March 2024 was the second wettest such period on record for the UK and the third wettest for Ireland, bringing more than a dozen severe storms.

Where the intense storm rainfall would have occurred about once every 50 years in the pre-industrial period, now it is expected around every five years. Global average temperatures have risen by 1.2C since pre-industrial times. If temperatures rose further to 2C of warming, storm rainfall and seasonal rain would increase, the researchers said. A warmer atmosphere is thirstier and holds more water, making rainfall heavier.

 

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