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Hi Dr. Lucero,
Thank you for your talk, I found it very informative and interesting!
You mentioned that Europe is the fastest warming continent globally, or that Europe as a continent is currently experiencing the biggest shifts due to climate change. Do you know what factors specifically are causing Europe to warm faster as opposed to other areas of the world? Does it have to do with geography or more so with more human impacts in that region?
Thank you!
Kaitlyn
Dear Kaitlyn,
Thank you for your question, climate change is a complex topic and I will copy here the abstract of a paper that analyzed Western Europe (but I believe we can extend these conclusions to Europe in general) ...and definetely antropogenic influence is undeniable from my point of view
Western Europe is warming much faster than expected
Abstract. The warming trend of the last decades is now so strong that it is discernible in local temperature observations. This opens the possibility to compare the trend to the warming predicted by comprehensive climate models (GCMs), which up to now could not be verified directly to observations on a local scale, because the signal-to-noise ratio was too low. The observed temperature trend in western Europe over the last decades appears much stronger than simulated by state-of-the-art GCMs. The difference is very unlikely due to random fluctuations, either in fast weather processes or in decadal climate fluctuations. In winter and spring, changes in atmospheric circulation are important; in spring and summer changes in soil moisture and cloud cover. A misrepresentation of the North Atlantic Current affects trends along the coast. Many of these processes ontinue to affect trends in projections for the 21st century. This implies that climate predictions for western Europe probably underestimate the effects of anthropogenic climate change.