Germany, like every other country in the world, is facing a future of increasing temperatures, rising sea levels and more extreme weather events.The risks from climate change are heavily dependent on where you live.If you live in Germany you can now find out how global heating will effect your region on a new interactive map which explains the increased risks from climate change at the local level.
If you enter a postcode into Climate Change Risks in Germany you can discover your local risks of increased flooding and discover how global heating will effect precipitation levels, the amount of snowfall, and local temperatures. The Climate Change Risks in Germany visualization also includes an animated map which shows how average temperatures in Germany have increased across the country over the last 120 years.
If you live in the USA you can discover how climate change will effect you on a ProPublica interactive map.In New Climate Maps Show a Transformed United States ProPublica show how different parts of the U.S. are likely to be affected by global heating. Their map shows where extreme heat will become commonplace, where growing food will become very difficult and where dangerous 'wet bulb' conditions will become the norm.
The New York Times has also released an interactive map which attempts to explain how global heating will effect the climate where you live. If you enter your county into Every Place Has Its Own Climate Risk. What Is It Where You Live? you can find out which climate risks will become most extreme in your area.
The NYT's interactive map colors areas of the United States to show the climate risks which will be most extreme in different part of the USA. For example most of the East Coast will face increased risks from severe hurricanes, much of the Midwest will experience extreme heat, the Western states will face extreme droughts and the Western states will see higher risk from wildfire. If you hover over your county on the map you can see the risks that your county will face in six different categories; hurricane risk, extreme rainfall risk, water stress risk, sea level rise risk, heat stress risk and wildfire risk.
Of course as a result of global heating most countries will experience higher average temperatures. A National Geographic interactive feature can show you how hot your region will become by comparing it to a city which currently experiences average temperatures that your home town can expect in the year 2070.
If carbon emissions continue to rise at the current rate then by 2070 the world will experience devastating climate change. For example Boston, Massachusetts will experience temperatures 5 degrees centigrade hotter than today and 49 mm more rain will fall. This is similar to the climate that Bardwell, Kentucky has today.
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