This change that is going to happen in this part of the world This will seriously affect Spain and will force all alerts to be activated. We must be prepared for everything that awaits us, accompanied by a series of changes that can be decisive and which will perhaps fully affect you. Now will be the time to start thinking about all that is yet to come in a future that is not at all hopeful. Scientists have sounded a powerful wake-up call that perhaps we should be aware of.
Now will be the time to start thinking about all that is yet to come and all that we can begin to do in a universe where anything is possible. Our planet calls for the use of certain elements that will reverse the significant climate change we are facing. Without a doubt, we must begin to see certain situations arriving that could end up being what marks a before and after with a change that we have seen can be particularly dangerous. The alert is activated and you should be aware of it as much as possible.
An imminent alert is coming
The Sahara is changing, the desert that affects us more than we imagine. Through this suspended dust caused by the famous rain of blood, it brings us notable news that we should know and that we perhaps had not even imagined until now.
Every element of our planet that is affected by these changes that we can anticipate ends up being a harsh reality. A small gesture thousands of kilometers away can fully affect a climate that changes from moment to moment, we see it in the small details which can be those which mark this future we face.
The Sahara is becoming greener and greener and this means that we will have to face some changes in our daily lives that we may not be prepared for. We must therefore be prepared to face a situation that could become one that will affect us closely.
Without a doubt, that moment will come when everything will affect us, especially when we are faced with a surface of this type. Meteorologists have no doubt about what awaits us.
The change in the part of the world that will seriously affect Spain
Spain is preparing to be hit by a change in the Sahara which, although it seems positive, might not be. Additionally, you will surely begin to see some notable developments in a climate that we see changing and in some ways putting half the country at risk.
Continuing the explanations of El Tiempo experts: “The numerical simulations of Dr. Marco Gaetani, associate professor at the IUSS School of Advanced Studies in Pavia (Italy), and his colleagues have identified that the greening of the Sahara has an impact throughout the year in the atmospheric circulation of the northern hemisphere, particularly during the boreal summer, when the African monsoon develops. Thus, regions of the northern hemisphere experienced abnormal weather conditions, being warmer and drier in Scandinavia and North America, colder winters and warmer summers in Western Europe, general warming in Central Europe, colder and rainier in the Mediterranean, in addition to warmer winters and colder summers with increased precipitation throughout the year in Central Asia.
Spain could be affected by this phenomenon: “To explain these changes, the team of research discovered that Walker circulation (an atmospheric loop in which air rises westward as it moves westward at higher latitudes and falls eastward as it moves eastward around the tropics) has moved westward during the Middle Holocene. This had important consequences for the jet stream, as it caused an intensification and change in the trajectory of the North Atlantic component in summer, followed by the North Pacific component in winter. They also identified a change in the North Atlantic Oscillation (where changes in surface sea level pressure along this ocean basin cause changes in temperature and precipitation patterns on neighboring continents) that is changed from positive to negative during the northern winter months (December to February) and summer. As a result, there were warmer and drier summers in the eastern Mediterranean, North Africa and polar North America, but colder and wetter summers in northern, central and eastern Europe and eastern of North America. All of these climate changes lasted for thousands of years due to an 80% reduction in dust emissions, as well as a decrease in albedo (a unitless measure of how the Earth’s surface reflects solar energy, where 0 is black and 1 is white). from 0.30 for the desert to 0.15 for shrubs, which accentuated tropical warming. “There was also better water recycling due to the presence of more vegetation, which helped avoid drought conditions.”