Rising CO2 puts more energy into the atmosphere. That means more extreme weather. This has been understood since at least 1980.
Here’s a report from the American Petroleum Institute from 1980 that correctly projected the economic impact and timing of current extreme weather events.
In some other comments you say the science is still an open question.
The projections in this report have been refined and confirmed repeatedly by dozens (if not hundreds) of independent research groups for the last 40 years.
At this point, I cannot imagine more definitive evidence that the science is settled.
'That means more extreme weather. This has been understood since at least 1980.'
The article you provided spoke nothing of extreme weather. It only spoke of average temperature rise.
Temperature rise is not in dispute.
I like the more energy in the atmosphere theory, this would mean events like the suns poles flipping last year or solar events causing ionisation of the poles would also have the same affect increasing energy. Or even that magnetosphere of the earth has decreased by 6%. Which blocks cosmic rays and solar storms. Leading to more clouds being seeded.
It is not proven co2 causes extreme cold weather. It's a hypothesis.
Here’s a report from the American Petroleum Institute from 1980 that correctly projected the economic impact and timing of current extreme weather events.
https://mk0insideclimats3pe4.kinstacdn.com/wp-content/upload...
In some other comments you say the science is still an open question.
The projections in this report have been refined and confirmed repeatedly by dozens (if not hundreds) of independent research groups for the last 40 years.
At this point, I cannot imagine more definitive evidence that the science is settled.