I live in the Prairies and work in agriculture. The Prairies are not cooling. Farmers in the south of Saskatchewan already have to switch to crops which are more heat resistance and need less water.
Oh really, because the deep freeze was a month late this winter. It rained in January, here in Saskatchewan. Rained, not snowed. Yeah, it's getting warmer in the Prairies.
I live in the Prairies and work in agriculture. The Prairies are not cooling. Farmers in the south of Saskatchewan already have to switch to crops which are more heat resistance and need less water.
Is the water element related to higher temperatures?
Water vapor is a greenhouse gas, but it doesn't get wetter in South Saskatchewan. It's getting drier.
Only pseudo science.
Oh really, because the deep freeze was a month late this winter. It rained in January, here in Saskatchewan. Rained, not snowed. Yeah, it's getting warmer in the Prairies.
You could say that to the comment I replied too. But all data shows that Canada is warming.
https://changingclimate.ca/CCCR2019/chapter/4-0/
In Saskatchewan the average temperature during winter is up by 3 to 4 degrees (depending on the region).