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It will be the same climate type, of course. However it will likely be 1-2 degrees milder, probably around 1 degree like has happened in the last 100 years.
The post below shows Buxton with about 0.8-1 degree increased temperature, but rain and sun are the same.
Location: Northern Ireland and temporarily England
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Probably the same to be honest. Maybe slightly warmer summers. I'm mot sure what type of winters we will have? Perhaps colder.
I don't see the effects of "global warming" in winter where I live. This spring has been very cold/wintry, the coldest in quite a while. In March 2013 we had a few weeks of lying snow and sub freezing temperatures, something that I thought I would never witness. Lets not even discuss 2010...
Location: Northern Ireland and temporarily England
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MeteoFlan
It will be the same climate type, of course. However it will likely be 1-2 degrees milder, probably around 1 degree like has happened in the last 100 years.
The post below shows Buxton with about 0.8-1 degree increased temperature, but rain and sun are the same.
This new climate will have:
- Warmer/drier summers
- Slightly more spring rain
- June is a little cloudier
- Record highs have increased everywhere, record lows stay the same.
- Decreased humidity overall.
It is Mediterranean and will still be the same, but there's a risk it may become drier, it actually averages 469 mm and could fall below and meet the requirements to become a semiarid climate, areas to the north already average below that
Its crazy how Melbourne has such an average high for its summer yet it has crazy hot records.
Pretty much the entire southern coast of australia is like this, because of the hot northerly winds that blow down straight from the heat bowl that is the centre of australia before a cold front or during a stationary high. If not, winds come from the west or off the coast, bringing milder conditions. It is very strange when you look at the forecast, and there's 5 days of 26°C, one day of 40 and one day of 20. I am used to it though
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