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  • 15 hours ago
A significant report from the UN World Meteorological Organization indicates there is an 86% chance that at least one year between 2026 and 2030 will exceed the global heat record set in 2024, with 2027 being the most probable due to the onset of an El Nino phenomenon. The findings suggest that Americans can expect above-average temperatures in almost every state, amplified drought conditions in the Southwest, heightened wildfire threats from California to the Southeast, and increased heavy rainfall leading to severe flooding in the Midwest and Northeast. The anticipated global average temperature from 2026 to 2030 could reach as much as 3.4 degrees Fahrenheit higher than pre-industrial levels.

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00:00The United Nations is issuing its starkest climate warning yet.
00:03And every American should know what it means for their state.
00:06A new report from the World Meteorological Organization gives an 86% probability
00:12that at least one year between now and 2030 will shatter the 2024 global heat record.
00:18Scientists say 2027 is the most likely candidate,
00:22driven by a strengthening El Nino expected to peak next year.
00:26For Americans, the consequences are direct and serious.
00:30The report projects higher heat across all 50 states, intensifying drought.
00:35Across the southwest-threatening water supplies for Arizona, Nevada, and California,
00:40wildfire risk escalates dramatically from the Pacific coast to the southeast.
00:45The Midwest and northeast face heavier rainfall events with increased catastrophic flooding.
00:51The global temperature baseline is already 3.4 degrees Fahrenheit above pre-industrial levels.
00:57The UN says the worst is still ahead.
01:00And the timeline is not centuries from now.
01:03It is the next four years.
01:04And we have to end all the subject của Do-Curphy.
01:04National launch o daran-stating weather осorast görs,
01:05National launch o
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