Bears awake and flowers in bloom. Whatever happened to winter?
http://environment.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,,1987437,00.html#article_continueLuke Harding in Moscow, Ed Pilkington in New York and Giles Tremlett in Madrid
Thursday January 11, 2007
The Guardian
The brick grotto where Moscow zoo's bears live was yesterday finally devoid of snuffling. After weeks of insomnia caused by the record mild winter in Russia, the six bears that live in the craggy enclosure have at last nodded off. Russia's famous winters may have scuttled the invasion plans of both Napoleon Bonaparte and Hitler but this year the winter has spectacularly failed to materialise in Moscow.
Meteorologists said that yesterday was the warmest January day in Moscow since 1957, at 5.3C.
"Usually it's -18C by now," Tania Simyonova said, pushing her 18-month-old son Daniel past the empty bear enclosure. Nearby a polar bear dozed; in the next enclosure a dromedary jogged up and down.
"I think winter has been cancelled," Mrs Simyonova said, gazing at the drizzling sky and the zoo's stubbornly unfrozen duck pond. "If you want to see winter this year you have to go to Siberia or the Urals."
The non-sleeping bears are a tiny jigsaw piece in an alarming global puzzle of unseasonable weather. In recent months there have been erratic monsoons in Nepal, glaciers melting earlier than expected in the Himalayas, and rains heavier and more intense than usual in Malawi. In November, Australia experienced its worst drought for about 1,000 years.
In Europe, the mild temperatures have wreaked havoc on the skiing season, with Alpine resorts forced to fire up their snow machines.
In Austria, hazel and alder trees have burst into flower. In Britain, the Met Office has predicted that global temperatures in 2007 have a 60% chance of becoming the hottest ever.
http://environment.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,,1987437,00.html#article_continue