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The Royal Meteorological SocietyΒ (RMetS) Weather Photographer of the Year contest is now in its 5th year, and has some amazing entrants that show us 2020 wasn’t just about a raging global pandemic.

Indeed, Mother Nature, combined with a rapidly warming planet has resulted in record storms, floods, droughts, and wildfires this year. Check out some of the impressive photos below, from photographers the world over.

β€œBlizzard”. The winning shot of a snowstorm in New York City. (Photo by Rudolf Sulgan/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œFrosty Bison”. Shot in Yellowstone national park, where winter temperatures range from –20 to –50C. (Photo by Laura Hedian/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œEl ChaltΓ©n”. A rare flying saucer-shaped cloud known as a lenticular appears over a rock formation in Argentina. (Photo by Francisco Javier Negroni Rodriguez/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œA Thirsty Earth”. A drone shot captures villagers crossing drought-stricken fields in Bangladesh. (Photo by Abdul Momin/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œA Predawn Thunderstorm Over El Paso”. A storm breaks over the desert and downtown area of the Texan city. (Photo by Lori Grace Bailey/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œDam Wet”. Water cascades down the 21-metre high dam wall at Wet Sleddale in Cumbria.. (Photo by Andrew McCaren/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œMammatus Outbreak”. Mammatus are a type of cloud that appear in association with strong thunderstorms. These loomed over Frankfurt am Main in Germany. (Photo by Boris Jordan/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œBaikal Treasure”. This shot of snow hummocks with the ice backlit by the midday sun at Lake Baikal in Siberia was voted the public’s favourite. (Photo by Alexey Trofimov/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œThe Red Terror”. An incredible tornado sweeps across rural Colorado. (Photo by Tori Jane Ostberg/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œTea Hills”. Early-morning mist over the tea hills of Phu Tho province in Vietnam. (Photo by Vu Trung Huan/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œTrees & Fog”. Frosted trees in front of a bank of fog, in a bitterly cold landscape near Broomfield, Colorado. (Photo by Preston Stoll/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)
β€œFrozen Life”. The winner in the Young Photographer category was this image of a leaf frozen in ice in Russia. (Photo by Kolesnik Stephanie Sergeevna/Royal Meteorological Society’s Weather Photographer of the Year Awards)


Via Fast Co-Exist:

No, you’re not imagining it. 2011 has been rife with extreme weather events. There have, in fact, been 2,941 monthly weather records broken in the U.S. this yearβ€”549 snowfall records, 1,090 rainfall records, and 1,302 heat-related records. The NRDC’s extreme weather map (time-lapse version available here) makes the rash of weather events seem all the more real.

No part of the U.S. was spared from extreme weather this year. Nevada saw four broken heat records, seven broken rainfall records, and three broken snowfall records. On the other side of the country, Pennsylvania saw 44 broken heat records, 55 broken rainfall records, and 49 broken September records, and the wettest September ever recorded.

President Obama visiting disaster victims in Joplin, Missouri
The crushing power of tornadoes ravaged the country in 2011
Record droughts helped create massive wildfires in Texas
Huge blizzards closed down parts of the midwest and east coast in 2011

These events haven’t just been an inconvenience; they have cost billions of dollars in agriculture and health consequences alone. Damage from wildfires, heat waves, and droughts in the Southwest alone has led to $10 billion in direct losses from cattle, agriculture, and structures. Midwest and Mississippi River flooding combined with Hurricane Irene incurred $20 billion in costs and took 60 lives.

Can any one of these events be conclusively linked to climate change? Not likely. Still, it’s not every year that the U.S. breaks nearly 3,000 weather records. It probably won’t be the last, especially if the world’s governments continue to drag their feet on climate change mitigation.