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Global heat record masks Europe's bitter January cold

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Based on 15 sources

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Major Media (1)Research (14)
ENSV

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Sources (15)

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56 claims

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Is the current cold period in Sweden and Europe directly linked to climate change, or is it within natural variability?
What are the specific resource shortages faced by Swedish government agencies in implementing climate adaptation, and how will they be addressed?
How will the EU Mission on Adaptation to Climate Change address the partial progress toward 2030 objectives?
What are the long-term impacts of the 2025 European wildfires on ecosystems and carbon emissions?
How will the record-breaking heat in the Southern Hemisphere affect global weather patterns in the coming months?
Attribution of current cold period to climate changefactual

The cold in Sweden, eastern US, and northern Europe may be due to global warming affecting the jet stream, but more research is needed.

According to swedenherald.com
vs.

No direct link between the current cold events and climate change is established; other sources focus on heat extremes.

According to www.smhi.se, The Guardian - Main UK, wmo.int

Context: There is scientific uncertainty about whether the observed cold extremes are a consequence of climate change. This disagreement reflects ongoing research and the complexity of attributing specific cold events to global warming.

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Transparency - Global heat record masks Europe's bitter January cold | Reed News