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Climate Change Could Turn Ireland’s Green To Brown

The wearin’ of the brown?


Forty shades of beige? – Climate change could turn Ireland’s legendary emerald landscape a dusty tan, with profound effects on its society and culture, a new study released in time for St. Patrick’s Day reported.
Entitled “Changing Shades of Green,” the report by the Irish American Climate Project twins science gleaned from the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the musings of a poet, a fiddler, a fisherman, a farmer and others with deep connections to Ireland.

Among other findings, the report said:


– Potatoes, the quintessential staple of Irish agriculture, might cease to be a commercial crop under the stress of prolonged summer droughts;


– Dried grasses in summer and autumn would change hillsides from green to brown;


– Pastures could be saturated until late spring, making it impossible for livestock to graze; instead, farmers would plant row crops to grow animal feed, a change in the look of Ireland;


– Reduced summer rains would hurt inland fisheries for salmon and sea trout;


– Bog bursts, caused when summer heat lifts peat bogs off the bedrock on hillsides and sends the bogs sliding down the slope, would be more frequent.


But the most evident change could be the difference in rainfall.


“The nickname Emerald Isle is a legacy of Ireland’s steady rainfall,” the report said. “By mid-century, winters could see an increase of more than 12 percent and summers could see a decrease of more than 12 percent. Seasonal storm intensity changes will increase the impact of these changes.”


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