In the first half of this year (January - June 2020) the heat broke the record of eighty thousand years in Siberia. Climate change and human activities are responsible for this. Researchers at the PP Shirsov Institute of Oceanology, the Russian Academy of Sciences and international universities and meteorological services also found that climate change caused by greenhouse gas emissions by humans raised the temperature otherwise it would not have risen more than two degrees. Its effect is believed to fall on the temperature of the whole world.
Due to climate change, India is facing two to four cyclonic storms in a week as well as locust attacks since December last year. Temperatures in Siberia have been above average since the beginning of this year. A new record temperature of 38 degrees for the arch tick was recorded on June 20 in the Russian city of Verkhoyansk. While the total temperature in Siberia was above 5 degrees on average from January to June. To measure the impact of climate change at this high temperature, scientists ran computer simulations that found that global warming to a degree is consistent with current climate change.
Scientists in their study found that assessing climate change under the current conditions, there was very little possibility of such heat for a long time. But the way greenhouse gas emissions are continuously increasing. In that case, the situation is bound to worsen by the end of the century. As a result of this, it is also natural to have many natural disasters.
In the same sequence, the heat of Siberia sparked widespread fires in many areas in the region, resulting in the burning of 1.15 million hectares of land by the end of June. It produced about 56 million tonnes of carbon dioxide. This is much higher than the annual emissions of some industrialized countries such as Switzerland, Norway. According to Professor Olga Jolina, this study not only shows that the magnitude of temperature is extremely rare. Due to this, there are many fluctuations in the weather pattern.