Tag Archives: Impossible

Northwest heat wave impossible without climate change

The deadly heat wave that roasted the Pacific Northwest and western Canada was virtually impossible without human-caused climate change that added a few extra degrees to the record-smashing temperatures, a new quick scientific analysis found.

An international team of 27 scientists calculated that climate change increased chances of the extreme heat occurring by at least 150 times, but likely much more.

The study, not yet peer reviewed, said that before the industrial era, the region’s late June triple-digit heat was the type that would not have happened in human civilization. And even in today’s warming world, it said, the heat was a once-in-a-millennium event.

But that once-in-a-millennium event would likely occur every five to 10 years once the world warms another 1.4 degrees (0.8 degrees Celsius), said Wednesday’s study from World Weather Attribution. That much warming could be 40 or 50 years away if carbon pollution continues at its current pace, one study author said.

This type of extreme heat “would go from essentially virtually impossible to relatively commonplace,” said study co-author Gabriel Vecchi, a Princeton University climate scientist. “That is a huge change.”

The study also found that in the Pacific Northwest and Canada climate change was responsible for about 3.6 degrees (2 degrees Celsius) of the heat shock. Those few degrees make a big difference in human health, said study co-author Kristie Ebi, a professor at the Center for Health and the Global Environment at the University of Washington.

“This study is telling us climate change is killing people,” said Ebi, who endured the blistering heat in Seattle. She said it will be many months before a death toll can be calculated from June’s blast of heat but it’s likely to be hundreds or thousands. “Heat is the No. 1 weather-related killer of Americans.”

In Oregon alone, the state medical examiner on Wednesday reported 116 deaths related to the heat wave.

The team of scientists used a well-established and credible method to search for climate change’s role in extreme weather, according to the National Academy of Sciences. They logged observations of what happened and fed them into 21 computer models and ran numerous simulations. They then simulated a world without greenhouse gases from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas. The difference between the two scenarios is the climate change portion.

“Without climate change this event would not have happened,” said study senior author Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at the University of Oxford.

What made the Northwest heat wave so remarkable is how much hotter it was than old records and what climate models had predicted. Scientists say this hints that some kind of larger climate shift could be in play — and in places that they didn’t expect.

“Everybody is really worried about the implications of this event,” said study co-author Geert Jan van Oldenborgh, a Dutch climate scientist. “This is something that nobody saw coming, that nobody thought possible. And we feel that we do not understand heat waves as well as we thought we did. The big question for many people is: Could this also happen in a lot of places?”

The World Weather Attribution team does these quick analyses, which later get published in peer-reviewed journals. In the past, they have found similar large climate change effects in many heat waves, including ones in Europe and Siberia. But sometimes the team finds climate change wasn’t a factor, as they did in a Brazilian drought and a heat wave in India.

Six outside scientists said the quick study made sense and probably underestimated the extent of climate change’s role in the heat wave.

That’s because climate models used in the simulations usually underestimate how climate change alters the jet stream that parks “heat domes” over regions and causes some heat waves, said Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann.

The models also underestimate how dry soil worsens heat because there is less water to evaporate, which feeds a vicious cycle of drought, said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA and the Nature Conservancy.

The study hit home for University of Victoria climate scientist Andrew Weaver, who wasn’t part of the research team.

“Victoria, which is known for its mild climate, felt more like Death Valley last week,” Weaver said. “I’ve been in a lot of hot places in the world, and this was the worst I’ve ever been in.

“But you ain’t seen nothing yet,” he added. “It’s going to get a lot worse.”

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Read more stories on climate issues by The Associated Press at https://www.apnews.com/Climate

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Follow Seth Borenstein on Twitter at @borenbears.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.



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Mets pull off impossible comeback win against Brewers

The Mets had to wait an extra 19 hours to get Jacob deGrom on the mound at Citi Field.

They waited a few more before finally mustering enough offense — in dramatic fashion — to avoid spoiling another one of his starts.

Jose Peraza hit a game-tying home run in the seventh inning to force an eighth inning, where Jeff McNeil delivered a walk-off, two-run single to lift the Mets to a 4-3 win over the Brewers in the first game of a doubleheader Wednesday afternoon.

After Peraza took Josh Hader deep to tie the game at two, Edwin Diaz came on to pitch the eighth inning with ghost runner Jace Peterson starting on second. He retired the first two batters he faced but then lost command, walking a pair of batters to load the bases before hitting Christian Yelich to force in the go-ahead run.

The Brewers brought on Brent Suter to pitch the bottom of the eighth, and he began by hitting Dominic Smith to put runners on first and second. James McCann then worked a nine-pitch at-bat before walking to load the bases for McNeil.

McNeil, who has been mostly quiet since coming off the injured list last month, shot a single back up the middle to score Francisco Lindor and Smith, who beat the throw from center fielder Jackie Bradley Jr.

Peraza had made sure deGrom’s start didn’t go to waste, coming off the bench to drill home run off Hader with one out in the seventh inning to tie the game 2-2. Hader entered the day 20-for-20 in save opportunities and had not allowed a home run this season.

Mets celebrate with Jeff McNeil after his game-winning hit on July 7, 2021.
Getty Images

DeGrom struck out 10 over seven innings but allowed two solo home runs that almost left him with the loss.

Brewers stud right-hander Corbin Burnes limited the Mets to just one run on six hits over 5 ²/₃ innings before Devin Williams got out of a bases-loaded rally in the sixth inning to keep the 2-1 lead intact.

Jose Peraza celebrates his home run off Josh Hader on July 7, 2021.
AP

Luis Urias did what just three batters had ever done before in deGrom’s career and took him deep to lead off the game. The Brewers third baseman turned on a 99 mph fastball and crushed it for a no-doubter into the left-field seats.

But the Mets came right back to tie the game in the bottom of the first inning against Brewers stud right-hander Corbin Burnes. Nimmo continued to be a sparkplug atop the lineup since returning from the IL, leading off with a double to the gap. He came around to score on Lindor’s bloop single, tying the game 1-1.

After Urias’ leadoff shot, deGrom locked in and retired the next 13 Brewers in a row. That stretch included his 1,500th career strikeout — the second-fastest pitcher to reach that threshold, one game behind Yu Darvish (197) — getting Willy Adames looking at a 100 mph fastball on the black in the fourth inning as he struck out the side.

Jace Peterson snapped the stretch with one out in the fifth inning, cracking another solo home run off deGrom to put the Brewers up 2-1.

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‘It’s almost impossible for Harry to be trusted,’ royal sources say

Could it get any worse for the Windsor brothers?

Anyone hoping for a détente between Princes William and Harry were sorely disappointed this week after the unveiling of the Princess Diana statue at Kensington Palace as the two princes barely spoke to one another and spent only 20 minutes in the same room after the ceremony.

The once inseparable brothers, who haven’t seen each other since Prince Phillip’s funeral, where William asked to not walk beside Harry, are still “warring” and sources close to the pair told the Mirror: it is “almost impossible for Harry to be trusted.”

PRINCE HARRY AND PRINCE WILLIAM ARE ON THEIR WAY TO HEALING, PRINCESS DIANA’S COACH SAYS: ‘BROTHERS DISAGREE’

The relationship has been particularly frosty since allegations were made that Markle bullied palace staff and the explosive Oprah Winfrey interview Harry and Meghan did this Spring in which they claimed Markle felt suicidal and unprotected during her pregnancy.

Particularly galling to both William and Prince Charles was, after the devastating Oprah interview, Harry continued to dish about private chats to CBS’ Gayle King – prompting the royals to refuse to have “one-on-one” chats with Harry because neither trust him enough to speak with him alone.

“Despite William and Harry coming together this week for the sole cause of commemorating their mother’s legacy, Harry is very much on the outside,” a source told the Mirror.

“They put on a show, did what they had to do to make sure the day went without a hitch and said goodbye.”

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Harry, who left for America almost immediately after the statue unveiling, is now back with his wife Meghan, who hasn’t seen her in-laws since Megxit.

Click here to read more of the New York Post.

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‘Impossible travel conditions’ as spring storm delivers historic snow and severe storms

This storm system begins with its first threat over the Rockies, as intense bands of snowfall will dump feet of powder across Colorado and Wyoming.

Dangerous travel conditions will exist across portions of interstates 25, 70, and 80 — so drivers are urged to use extreme caution.

“Very difficult to impossible travel conditions expected across all of southeast Wyoming and the Nebraska panhandle,” the National Weather Service (NWS) office in Cheyenne, Wyoming, said Thursday. “Expect extended periods of whiteout conditions, low visibilities, and possible power outages.”

This slow-moving system has the potential to produce the biggest snowfall in decades for the eastern Rockies and western Plains through the weekend.

But that’s just one side of the system. The south and eastern sides of the system — which will be pulling in warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico — will be fueling several days of severe storms, with the possibility of tornadoes.

Nearly 20 million people will be under the threat for severe storms at some point Friday through Sunday across half a dozen states with damaging winds, large hail, and tornadoes.

In addition to all that, the cold front will eventually stall across the Southern Plains, resulting in heavy rain over much of the same region throughout the next couple of days which will lead to flooding.

Here is what to expect and when.

Friday

Friday morning the snow begins to pick up. Throughout the day the snow bands will become more frequent across Colorado and Wyoming and travel conditions will continue to deteriorate.

While there are still some uncertainties at play, the general message from the NWS office in Boulder, Colorado is for 1-3 feet of snow for much of their forecast area.

Colorado is not the only state expecting intense snowfall accumulations. Eastern Wyoming, western Nebraska and even parts of southern South Dakota will likely see over a foot of snow through the weekend.

A severe threat is also expected to develop Friday across parts of west Texas and western Oklahoma.

“A cluster of strong to severe storms with embedded supercells is forecast to move northeastward from the vicinity of Lubbock into the southeastern Texas Panhandle during the early to mid evening,” said the Storm Prediction Center. “In addition to large hail, wind damage will also be a possibility with the stronger cells within this cluster.

Both the severe and snow sides of this system will intensify further during the weekend.

Saturday

By Saturday, it will be snowing intensely along the Front Range of the Rockies and moving into the western Plains.

This area is no stranger to March snowfalls. In fact, March is actually the snowiest month of the year for portions of Colorado and Wyoming. In Denver, each of their top 10 March snowstorms totals over a foot of snow. This year could be added to that list, as historic totals are not out of the question.

“The snowfall totals currently forecast are absolutely historic,” the NWS office in Cheyenne said.

Travel will also be very difficult Saturday. Whiteout conditions will lead to very low visibility and causing poor driving conditions. People are urged to stay home if they can.

“Snowfall rates of nearly 3 inches per hour in the foothills in the forecast Saturday night which means travel would be impossible,” the NWS in Boulder said. “Boulder and Fort Collins could see snowfall rates of around 2 inches per hour during this period.”

The severe storm threat also begins to increase today. The areas with the greatest threat for severe weather Saturday will be Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Abilene, Texas and Wichita, Kansas.

The threats themselves remain the same as Friday — damaging winds, large hail and isolated tornadoes. The difference is the location and intensity of the storms. The system — slowly — shifts to the east.

The timeline for best severe chances looks to be in the afternoon and early evening. While some of the severe storm threat does decrease overnight, it will not diminish entirely. Power outages are possible.

There is still some uncertainty over whether all necessary ingredients will be present for robust severe weather, particularly across Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas on Saturday and Sunday.

Sunday

By Sunday, the storm system basically becomes stationary over far southeastern Colorado and western Kansas. This will weaken the system’s impact on snowfall rates which are expected to begin to decrease substantially throughout the day. However, drivers are still urged to take caution as roadways are still expected to be very dangerous.

While the snow may begin to slow, the severe threat certainly does not — it just changes locations.

Sunday, the severe storms push east into Arkansas, Missouri and Louisiana.

One thing that could limit severe potential would be cloud cover. However, any breaks of sunshine would allow for an increase in instability.

See if your area could see severe weather.

The other growing concern for Sunday will be the threat for flooding, particularly across portions of Missouri, Kansas and Illinois — where flood watches already exist.

Other states — such as Arkansas, Oklahoma, Kentucky, and Indiana — also have the potential for flooding, especially if storms begin to train over the same locations.

Widespread rainfall totals through Sunday are expected to be in the 2-4 inch range, but some isolated spots could exceed 6 inches total.

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Impossible 7’ & ‘Quiet Place 2’ To Hit Paramount+ After 45-Days In Cinema – Deadline

In a clear sign that Paramount is committed to theatrical, but still open to the future of streaming,  A Quiet Place Part II and Mission: Impossible 7 will go on the streaming service 45 days after their theatrical release dates.

A Quiet Place Part II was originally scheduled to open on March 20 last year before Covid derailed its release date plans. The picture was rescheduled for Labor Day weekend last year temporarily, then pushed ultimately to Sept. 17 this year after Tenet opened and fizzled stateside last August with New York and Los Angeles multiplexes closed. The first John Krasinski directed horror film, which he also starred in with wife Emily Blunt, took off like a comet, initially at its SXSW world premiere in 2018, then opening to $50.2M, and grossing $188M domestic, $341M WW off a $17M production cost.

Mission: Impossible 7 is currently scheduled to hit theaters on Nov. 19. Through six movies, the Mission: Impossible franchise has minted over $3.57 billion through six movies, with the most recent title in 2018, Mission: Impossible – Fallout grossing the most for the series with over $791M WW.

Paramount+ ViacomCBS Streaming Event: Deadline’s Complete Coverage

While many Paramount releases have been sold to streamers during Covid (some of them not owned even by Paramount, i.e. The Lovebirds, The U.S. vs. Billie Holiday, Trial of the Chicago 7), the studio has kept key event features sacred on their theatrical release schedule, i.e. Top Gun: Maverick. 

Also going to Paramount+ 45 days after theatrical is the animated movie Paw Patrol on Aug. 20.



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Mission Impossible ‘filming in the UAE is ABANDONED due to the pandemic and crew are sent home’

Mission Impossible becomes an impossible mission as ‘filming in the UAE is ABANDONED after fed-up crew demand to be sent home due to looming Covid travel restrictions’

  • Production staff working on the seventh installment of the franchise have reportedly ‘demanded’ to return to the UK due to changes in travel
  • From Monday, travellers returning to England from  33 ‘red list’ countries will be expected to quarantine for 10-days and pay a £1,750 fee
  • Mission: Impossible 7 staff ‘revolted’ due to the new restrictions
  • Studio executives were allegedly forced to hire a private jet for crew and halt filming in the Middle East
  •  They are now expected to resume work in England

Filming for Tom Cruise’s Mission Impossible has been cancelled in the Middle East due to the pandemic, with cast and crew forced to fly home, it was reported on Friday.

It is alleged that production staff working on the seventh instalment have ‘demanded’ to return to the UK before mandatory 10-day hotel quarantine rules are enforced.

From Monday, people jetting into the UK from 33 ‘red list’ countries, have to pay a £1,750 fee for their hotel stay, resulting in a ‘revolt’ by the film’s crew who feared a delay in returning to their families. 

Yikes: Filming for Tom Cruise’s Mission Impossible has been cancelled in the Middle East due to the pandemic, with cast and crew forced to fly home, it was reported on Friday

The Sun reported that studio executives were forced to hire a private jet to ensure staff could return home. 

A source said to the publication: ‘The whole production has hit yet another issue and there have been revolts among the cast and crew.

‘For quite a few of them, the prospect of having to quarantine in a hotel back in the UK is a step too far and they’ve demanded to be flown home before the rules change. The studio has had to fund a jet back and the missing cast and crew will inevitably cause another delay.

‘Morale is really down and many of the younger staff who aren’t earning the big bucks just don’t feel it’s worth it any more.’ 

Another setback: It is alleged that production staff working on the seventh installment have ‘demanded’ to return to the UK before mandatory 10-day hotel quarantine rules are enforced

Filming is now expected to resume in England, the latest change in a long list of setbacks dating back to last year. 

MailOnline have contacted Tom’s representatives and Universal Pictures for further comment.  

Crew first began shooting scenes in February in 2020, a few weeks prior to the first global lockdown. 

Another source said that star Tom, 58, is adamant filming will be completed in time for Mission Impossible’s planned release date of November 2021.

It comes amid reports that Tom has built a COVID-19 secure studio to complete his upcoming blockbuster.     

Protest: From Monday, people jetting into the UK from 33 ‘red list’ countries, have to pay a £1,750 fee for their hotel stay, resulting in a ‘revolt’ by the film’s crew who feared a delay in returning to their families

According to another report in The Sun, the actor is spending millions to adapt a former military base for filming to ensure the rest of the production goes off without a hitch.

Production was thought to be moving to a former tank design base in Longcross in Surrey from Leavesden in Hertfordshire.     

It comes after claims that five crew members ‘quit’ after the actor ‘launched into a second rant’ following his fury about staff breaking COVID rules.  

The actor is said to have given staff a dressing down after he caught them breaking UK COVID-19 rules at Warner Bros. Studios in Leavesden. 

A source claimed after news of the first outburst was made public that there has been ‘more anger’ at the already ‘tense’ production.  

It was also previously reported that the star scolded workers who flouted social distancing rules while filming at Warner Bros. Studios.

Invoking the no-nonsense attitude of his character, Ethan Hunt, the actor is said to have told them: ‘If I see you doing it again, you’re f***ing gone’.

The paper said the dressing down was recorded on an audio tape, in which he is heard to add: ‘And if anyone in this crew does it, that’s it — and you too and you too.

‘And you, don’t you ever f***ing do it again. We are not shutting this f***ing movie down.’

The American actor was reportedly angered after seeing the pair stood less than a metre away from each other at a computer screen.  

Back to business: Filming is now expected to resume in England, the latest change in a long list of setbacks dating back to last year

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