Laughable. We are in our infancy of understanding climate in this planet. Projecting 25 years into the future is impossible.
Lucky_Marzipan_8032 on
i thought we were all gonna be dead from greenhouse emissions by now anyways. someone should save this map in a time capsule for 2050 and see how wrong it is
OldeArrogantBastard on
What’s the reason for the expectation of less rainfall in Florida?
domino3ff3ct on
We have a hard time predicting weekly weather yet alone decades out….
Contundo on
What’s with the weird borders?
Adventurous-Sort-808 on
That Pennsylvania corns gonna be lookin mighty tall.
Fun_Percentage_2693 on
Oh yeah scientists making 25-year long predictions, that’s very accurate for sure
Repulsive-Row803 on
Gonna be generally beneficial for us in Spokane.
Most buildings are not at risk of flooding due to our topography and loamy soil (only 11%). Most of the water will go directly into one of the most productive aquifers in the world.
Ebenezer-F on
Interesting that Minneapolis is in the center of a swastica of rivers. Coincidence?
SinfulCatholic on
Bro they can’t even predict the rainfall tomorrow
Flewey_ on
Therapist: Natural borders USA can’t hurt you.
Natural borders USA:
IrrationalQuotient on
Interesting. Source?
PropUganda on
Those divisions, referring to bodies of water, should just be independent countries.
graphguy on
Pretty map. … but, are these the same folks who have difficulty forecasting the rainfall we’ll get next week?
So_spoke_the_wizard on
This is unclear. Some places it says precipitation, other rainfall. I can see northern areas with more rainfall because there less that falls as snow. That appears to be supported by the second map where frequency and intensity of storms is little changed.
Whornz4 on
I’m sure Texas will embrace preparing for it now, right? Right?
Mosaic78 on
I thought higher temps meant droughts not more rain.
Korpilu on
Damn, 2050 looks pretty dry, huh? 😂
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28 Kommentare
Very interesting map!
Desert dwellers:

Nevada might be habitable for once.
Penn’s rainforest when?
/remind me in 2049
Cleveland is going to get more rain but it’s just gonna be mist.
The northeast is unfortunately not following this trend. Two years of extremely low rainfall in a row has been awful
How is Miami getting less rain than central and northern Florida?
The people that can’t correctly tell you if it’ll rain this afternoon are telling you about the weather coming in 25 years.
If you don’t believe them you’re „AnTi-sCiEnCe.“ smdh ⛈️
Given the nation wide droughts so much of the country has been having I’m wondering if this is truly unwelcomed?
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/CurrentMap.aspx
Laughable. We are in our infancy of understanding climate in this planet. Projecting 25 years into the future is impossible.
i thought we were all gonna be dead from greenhouse emissions by now anyways. someone should save this map in a time capsule for 2050 and see how wrong it is
What’s the reason for the expectation of less rainfall in Florida?
We have a hard time predicting weekly weather yet alone decades out….
What’s with the weird borders?
That Pennsylvania corns gonna be lookin mighty tall.
Oh yeah scientists making 25-year long predictions, that’s very accurate for sure
Gonna be generally beneficial for us in Spokane.
Most buildings are not at risk of flooding due to our topography and loamy soil (only 11%). Most of the water will go directly into one of the most productive aquifers in the world.
Interesting that Minneapolis is in the center of a swastica of rivers. Coincidence?
Bro they can’t even predict the rainfall tomorrow
Therapist: Natural borders USA can’t hurt you.
Natural borders USA:
Interesting. Source?
Those divisions, referring to bodies of water, should just be independent countries.
Pretty map. … but, are these the same folks who have difficulty forecasting the rainfall we’ll get next week?
This is unclear. Some places it says precipitation, other rainfall. I can see northern areas with more rainfall because there less that falls as snow. That appears to be supported by the second map where frequency and intensity of storms is little changed.
I’m sure Texas will embrace preparing for it now, right? Right?
I thought higher temps meant droughts not more rain.
Damn, 2050 looks pretty dry, huh? 😂