Climate change is one of the defining challenges of our time. It is more important than ever to visualize and understand its likely impacts. The new Köppen-Geiger Explorer hopes to meet this challenge by providing a powerful and interactive way to visualize climate zones and their transitions over time, based on the widely used Köppen-Geiger climate classification system.
The Köppen-Geiger climate classification system is one of the most widely used frameworks for categorizing the world's climates. It classifies climates based on observed temperature and precipitation patterns, dividing the Earth into five primary climate types, each with several subcategories.
The Köppen-Geiger Explorer is a new, innovative interactive map that visualizes how the world's climate zones are likely to change based on various climate model predictions. This tool allows users to explore past, present, and future climates, offering valuable insights into global and regional climate patterns. The map features two main filter controls that enable users to select a date range and explore different climate change scenarios. These controls make it possible to visualize how different scenarios might affect global climate zones at specific future dates.
For a country-specific perspective, the tool provides an intuitive Sankey diagram, summarizing past and future changes in climate zones. By selecting a country on the map, the diagram visualizes the flow of transitions between different climate categories, offering a detailed understanding of how these changes play out on a national scale.
The Pudding’s Climate Zones map also utilizes the Köppen climate classification to help visualize the global and local impacts of climate change. In Climate Zones - How Will Your City Feel in the Future? an interactive map highlights the current climate zones of 70 global cities and projects the climate zones these cities will inhabit after global warming takes effect.
The Pudding’s Climate Zones map divides the world into the Köppen system’s five main climate zones -Arid, Tropical, Temperate, Cold, and Polar - along with their subcategories. At the end of the presentation, you can explore a detailed list of the 70 global cities categorized by their current climate zones. Selecting a city from this list reveals how it transitions into its future climate zone, accompanied by insights on how average temperatures in the city are expected to change due to global warming.
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