See the Future of Climate Change with This New Map Tool
The University of Maryland’s Center for Environmental Science has developed a new communications tool to help visualize climate changes in 540 North American cities. The map tool illustrates that Salisbury on Maryland’s Eastern Shore can expect to have a humid, subtropical climate similar to that of the Mississippi Delta by 2080 if emissions of carbon dioxide to the Earth’s atmosphere are not reduced.
Study author Matt Fitzpatrick says, “Within the lifetime of children living today, the climate of many regions is projected to change from the familiar to conditions unlike those experienced in the same place by their parents, grandparents, or perhaps any generation in millennia.”
Our climate is inevitably changing due to the amount of carbon dioxide already in the atmosphere. Even if the Paris Climate Agreement is fully implemented and new emissions are substantially reduced, by 2080 the Eastern Shore will still feel more like northern Arkansas or the coast of North Carolina do today. These changes will have profound effects on agriculture, hunting, birding, and even the plants that grow in our backyards.
Both Baltimore and Salisbury, MD will be more like Cleveland, Mississippi, while Dover, Delaware, will be even hotter with summer weather about 10 degrees hotter and almost 36% drier, similar to current summers in Duncanville in east-central Texas. View the map at https://fitzlab.shinyapps.io/cityappor read the full study in the Nature Communicationsacademic journal. You can put in the name of the town nearest you and find out what the probable weather will be if carbon emissions are not significantly reduced.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore





