This summer will be talked about for a long, long time. All over the globe, millions upon millions of people are wondering what in the world is causing all of the crazy weather in 2010. The truth is that there is always unusual weather around the globe, but this summer it has seemed like the end of the world as we know it in many areas. The greatest heatwave in recorded history has sparked massive wildfires all across Russia. Monumental rainfalls have caused horrific flooding in Pakistan and China. In many other areas, a very serious lack of rain is playing havoc with crops. So is all of this just an anomaly or the start of a new trend? Nobody really seems to know.
What does seem certain is that the people of Russia will remember this summer for the rest of their lives. As you read this, tens of thousands of people are pouring out of the city of Moscow in an attempt to escape the worst heat "in 1000 years".
This terrible heatwave has sparked an unprecedented number of wildfires all over Russia. In fact, the Russian army has actually been called in to battle the wildfires which are threatening literally dozens of towns and villages.
So just how much damage is being done by these wildfires?
Well, it is being reported that Russia’s record heat wave may have already taken 15,000 lives and cost the Russian economy $15 billion.
In fact, the heat wave has had such an impact on wheat crops that the Russian government has banned all grain exports for the rest of this year.
And that is really bad news considering the fact that Russia is one of the biggest grain exporters in the world.
But Russia is not the only nation that is experiencing really weird weather.
Hundreds of all-time temperature records are being set across the United States, Europe and Japan.
In other areas of the world, too much rain is the big problem.
For example, the U.K. has just experienced their wettest July ever.
Flooding is a big problem in other parts of Europe as well. Rivers are overflowing and thousands are being evacuated across Poland, Germany and the Czech Republic.
However, the flooding in Europe pales in comparison to the truly historic flooding that is going on in Asia right now.
Rescuers were recently spotted piling muddy bodies into trucks in China where more than 1,100 people have died from landslides caused by unprecedented flooding.
But nothing tops what is going on in Pakistan at the moment.
Approximately 1,600 people have been killed and 2 million more have been left homeless by flooding that is so bad that it is almost impossible to put it into words.
The United Nations has already rated the flooding in Pakistan as the greatest humanitarian crisis in recent history. More people have been affected by the Pakistan flooding than the Southeast Asian tsunami of a few years ago and the recent earthquakes in Kashmir and Haiti combined.
That is what you call a major disaster.
It seems like very few areas of the world have avoided weather problems this summer.
Unfortunately, bad weather means that world food supplies are being seriously affected....
*An 80 year old farmer in the state of Maryland says that this is the worst drought that he has ever seen.
*World wheat stockpiles are projected to fall to a two-year low as demand rises and production falls. As noted above, the Russian government has already banned all grain exports for the rest of this year.
*Europe's second biggest grain producer, Germany, says that its harvest will fall 12% or more in 2010.
So how will all of this impact you? Well, expect to start paying more at the supermarket. Food prices around the world are already beginning to rise substantially.
Ouch.
So what is causing all of this crazy weather?
Well, it has been reported that meteorologists monitoring the atmosphere above the northern hemisphere believe that unusual holding patterns in the jet stream are to blame for both the extreme heat in Russia and the floods in Pakistan.
However, Swiss and German scientists say that the crazy weather is happening because the sun is burning hotter than usual.
In any event, there are only a few weeks left in the summer of 2010, so hopefully things will get back to normal soon.
Although considering how unusual last winter was, perhaps we should start preparing now for the winter of 2010/2011.
















