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December 31, 2006

A weather prediction for 2007 and beyond

The subject of global warming, bubbling in the meteorological community (and elsewhere in academia) for several years, finally burst controversially into the public consciousness in 2006. It’s our prediction that it will be an increasingly controversial topic in 2007.
The Earth’s climate is changing; indeed, all evidence is that it has always done so and always will do so, but a new (and controversial) factor in the “change equation” is man’s role in future climatic shifts.
We have been proceeding headlong and, until now, blindly into a future of “climatic uncertainty” in the sense that there exists an unknown ratio between the benefits and costs of climate change. Decision makers need to weigh and compare the risks of premature or unnecessary actions with the risks of failing to take actions that subsequently prove to be warranted. The issues are complex, but man has finally begun to address them.
--By Richard Koeneman, WGN Weather Center Meteorologist

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2006 TEMPERATURE WRAP-UP

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FULL MOON ON JAN. 1

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December 30, 2006

A mild, wet New Year’s Eve

This evening’s Bears-Packers game and other Chicago area New Year’s Eve celebrations will take place under cloudy and rainy skies, but with mild temperatures.
Afternoon readings climb to a relatively balmy 50º, a level reached in Chicago on only nine New Year’s Eves since 1870.
Midnight revelers will experience temperatures in the lower or middle 40s along with rain and fog. That stands is sharp contrast to a crystal-clear atmosphere that prevailed across the city on Dec. 31, 1967, when the thermometer hovered at -9º at the stroke of midnight—the lowest temperature ever registered in the city at the very moment the clock clicked into the new year. Somewhat colder temperature return to the area on Monday, along with a little snow, but the prevailing mild pattern that begin in early December persists. Rain and readings near 50º arrive again later in the week.
--By Richard Koeneman, WGN Weather Center Meteorologist

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