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  • Weather-Related Natural Disasters Now Cost $250B Globally Each Year

    Pam Knox

    May 18, 2016

    Dr. Marshall Shepherd of UGA posted a blog entry to Forbes.com this week describing the cost of weather-related disasters across the world.  You can read it here.  In it, he states that “From 1995 to 2015, weather-related disasters killed over 600,000 people (roughly 30,000 per year) and injured or adversely impacted 4.1 billion global citizens.”…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science, Severe
  • Ethiopia’s severe drought has fewer bad impacts due to better land management

    Pam Knox

    May 17, 2016

    Business Insider posted a story this week describing the current drought in Ethiopia, which is one of the worst in the last fifty years.  But unlike previous droughts, the worst impacts have been blunted by smarter methods of managing the land. The key to improvements: slowing down runoff so that it does not erode valuable…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops, Drought
  • Florida’s wet and dry seasons, explained

    Pam Knox

    May 17, 2016

    As the wet season gets underway in Florida, Jeff Masters has a nice description of the wet and dry seasons in Florida in his Wunderblog post this week.  We are seeing a pattern shift to more typical wet conditions in Florida and points north, which may help to reduce the moderate drought that has developed…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science
  • NASA: April breaks global temperature record, marking seven months of new highs

    Pam Knox

    May 16, 2016

    The Guardian reported on the most recent global climate report from NASA that globally, April set a new temperature record, making this the seventh month in a row to break the record.  With this string of warm months, 2016 is almost certain to set a new record for the warmest year ever.  Part of this…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science
  • North Carolina’s disappointing wheat crop

    Pam Knox

    May 16, 2016

    The Southeast Farm Press noted this week that North Carolina has had a disappointing wheat crop this year, due in part to poor weather which affected yields.  They noted that “Wet weather this year has lowered nutrient uptake in wheat and increased disease pressure. Due to a soggy February, Pythium root rot and crown rot…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops
  • Variable May conditions so far

    Pam Knox

    May 16, 2016

    So far May 2016 has had variable temperature and precipitation conditions.  Most areas of the Southeast have been above normal in temperature, particularly South Carolina.  Rainfall has varied widely, with North Carolina and Virginia receiving the most along with a strip of the western Florida peninsula.  Alabama and Georgia have been dry.  According to the…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks
  • New ways to reduce methane from cattle

    Pam Knox

    May 15, 2016

    One area of hot research in reducing carbon emissions is work on reducing the emission of methane from cattle digestion.  While cow belches do not put as much carbon into the air as the burning of fossil fuel for transportation and energy production, it is one area in agriculture that is being studied to see…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Livestock
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The “Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast” blog is provided by the Associate Dean of Extension as a service to Extension agents and agricultural producers across the Southeast US. Come here to find out information about the impacts of weather and climate on agriculture across Georgia and beyond.

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