April was the moistest April on record for the planet

This April 2024 was the moistest April on record for the planet, reports Ben Noll, a climatologist who monitors rainfall.

That is a problem as moisture is the most prevalent Green House Gas (GHG). As the temperatures rise, the rate of vaporisation increases, threatening to turn into a runaway acceleration of global warming.

As covered by bne IntelliNews, extreme rainfall is already a problem as powerful storms and flash floods threaten to do trillions of dollars of damage. In April Dubai already saw an entire year’s worth of rain fall in a single day turning the international airport into a lake and flooding the subway.

Each degree increase in temperature increases vaporisation by 7% and increases the chances of extreme storms by 15%, according to scientists.

However, moisture is not tracked in the same way as temperatures are. The poor data that has largely focused on the traditional five GHGs means that scientists are increasingly worried that the climate models are wrong and underestimating the rate at which global warming is accelerating.

“A warmer world is a moister world: this is evidenced by a weather variable called 'total column water' or 'precipitable water', the total moisture amount in a column of air, from the ground all the way up to the top of the atmosphere,” says Noll. “Global monthly temperature rankings are tracked in real-time, so why not atmospheric moisture too?”

Rising water vapour will also eventually have lethal effects when a deadly combination of high temperatures and high humidity creates a wet-bulb effect: the humidity prevents sweat from evaporating leading the body to overheat, killing the victim within six hours if no other way of cooling down is available.