Climate change will hit this city in Balkans the hardest

Summer and winter in Europe will be warmer, with average temperatures rising between 3.5 and 4.7 degrees Celsius, as temperatures rise is expected to affect Pristina, according to a study published in the magazine. PLOS One. According to research estimates, by 2050 the temperature will mostly change [...]
According to research estimates, by 2050, temperatures will mostly change in Ljubljana by eight degrees in warmer months.
This is as if cities move 1,000 miles [1,000 km] farther south and most will be affected farther from the equator, according to Krauter Leb.
Slovenia's capital will have a climate like that in Virginia Beach in the US, where average annual temperatures will be higher by 3.5 degrees.
Novi Sad residents Banja Luka and Sarajevo will have a climate similar to Dallas in the US over the next three decades, with an average annual temperature increase of between 2.7 and 2.9 degrees. Similar forecasts apply to Zagreb, Skopje, Pristina and Podgorica.
Belgrade, according to estimates, will have a climate like San Antonio, Texas, with higher summer temperatures of 7.9 degrees Celsius.
Other European cities also expect change in London and Moscow will be six warmer degrees during the summer.
The authors of the study expect the peak temperature increase to be 2140, after which they will begin to decline.












