If you mean the warmer winters we've been seeing for the last 20 years or so,
hey, bring it on. Summers? Actually they've been cooler in my neck of the woods.
I have a suspicion that summertime max temps have been cooler in more places
than just the eastern United States.
Precipitation is up in the United States. The U.S. has the best weather records in
the world so it's hard to say if there's been more rain in recent years elsewhere.
But there probably has been, see below:
Drought is not up; the IPCC tells us that in a warmer climate there will be more
precipitation. Hardly a recipe for more drought if that's what you are implying.
Weather conditions have to be right for the locusts to swarm, and it's probably
not the "Hot & Dry" you people are always crying about.
Normally these regions see some rain, locusts reproduce, the area dries out,
and the locusts die. This year, though, there has been so much rain that hasn't
happened yet. Breeding conditions are ideal for them and there has been no
threatening weather to kill them.
WDRB
Now I don't know anything about WDRB but you will have to show that the locusts are swarming
because of Global Warming/Climate Change/the Climate Crisis or whatever you people are calling
it these days.
Until you do that, your implication the locust swarms are due to an increase in atmospheric CO2
paints you as full of ****
I'm sure there is.