Réchauffement climatique : « c’est déjà pire que ce que j’imaginais »
Ici, ce sont des records de chaleur qui tombent. Là, ce sont des trombes d’eau. Et plus loin, des forêts entières qui partent en fumée. Les scientifiques nous avaient avertis de ces conséquences du réchauffement climatique. Mais eux-mêmes sont aujourd’hui surpris de leur ampleur.
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I didn't think it was possible, not in my lifetime anyway.
— Scott Duncan (@ScottDuncanWX) June 30, 2021
+49.6°C in Canada 🇨🇦 That is 121°F!
This is the story of the Canadian heat record that was crushed on 3 consecutive days by an unfathomable margin of +4.6°C (+8°F).
This moment will be talked about for centuries. pic.twitter.com/Ogkn5KQKBM
Shocking images of the flooding in parts of Germany
— Thomas Sparrow (@Thomas_Sparrow) July 15, 2021
This is #Ahrweiler in Rhineland Palatinate (video via @NicosPanoptikum) pic.twitter.com/hYnK2wAdmf
Earlier in this thread there was a video of people helping those trapped in lower levels. There is more footage showing other places in Zhengzhou where citizens also joined forces to help those trapped by the water to get out safely. pic.twitter.com/1R9q1JcUtY
— Manya Koetse (@manyapan) July 20, 2021
Northern Ireland has for the second time in 5 days provisionally broken it's all-time temperature record 📈
— Met Office (@metoffice) July 21, 2021
Castlederg in County Tyrone recorded a temperature of 31.3 °C at 1437 this afternoon 🌡️
This exceeds the 31.2 °C that Ballywatticock recorded last Saturday #heatwave pic.twitter.com/M4viWndTEi