HockeyTx82 wrote:EnnisTx wrote:I have studied this subject most of my long life, but no one ever mentions this information is derived from Major Metropolitan Cities that are now mainly Concrete and asphalt streets including the building materials for structures and all the rooftops. It takes longer to cool down in those areas. I know I'll probably be scolded for saying this, but there's to much fear mongering going on by the green deal folks that use more fossil fuels in a day than most people do in a week to travel around and say we're the problem. Sorry not sorry we need fossil fuels to survive.
Follow the money.........
This isn’t the argument you think it is, nor is it scientific by any means.
Sticking to actual data, using heat waves as a metric is problematic because defined as a period of temperatures deviating above the norm. It doesn’t account for how the norm has changed over time.
Let’s say hypothetically, a heat wave were defined by temperatures 10 degrees above normal, and the average temp for today in Dallas in the dust bowl was 90, but this year the average was 100. To have a heat wave back then you’d have to have a temp of 100, but today you’d have to make it to 110. If this were to occur, the magnitude of the heatwaves would stay the same even though the average rose 10 degrees.