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Throughout the 10,000 year history of human civilization, weather patterns have remained relatively constant. Though floods, droughts, storms and other extreme weather events have always been a reality, they have been rare occurences interrupting long periods of calm - sudden outbursts of violence marring a gentle rhythm.

Now, because of human induced climate change, that gentle rhythm is breaking up.

The frequency of extreme weather events has increased steadily over the 20th century. The number of weather-related disasters during the 1990s was four times that of the 1950s, and cost 14 times as much in economic losses. One in five Canadians was directly affected by a weather disaster between 1996 and 2000.

These trends confirm the predictions of computer models: as the atmosphere warms, the climate will not only become hotter but much more unstable.  

  • Rewiring the Weather Machine
  • The El Nino Connection
  • Extreme Weather on the Rise
  • Extreme Economic Impacts
  • A Nurturing Past

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