JustPaste.it

Grand Solar Minimum and Global Food Supply

NOAA Sunspot Cycle July 2019.jpg

The current Grand Solar Minimum (GSM) has happened many times in the past. A GSM is characterized by a very low sun spot formation. The most recent prolonged minimum was the Maunder Minimum from 1645-1715 when sunspots became exceedingly rare.

Some say a GSM cools the planet but this is only partly true. The loss of sun spots and a regular infusion of solar flares into earth's magnetosphere can cause earth's climate to change dramatically - especially at peak GSM. The cause is due to conditions that allow jet streams to wander north and south of their traditional latitudes. While temperatures may fall in some mid-latitude regions, temperatures may rise in Alaska, for example.

Galactic Cosmic Rays (GCR) that are usually deflected from earth by solar flares increase in quantity to provide more rain, flooding and cooler temperatures due to increased cloudiness. GCR provides increased cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) to produce more rain.

Crop Failures and Global Food Supply

Unpredictable weather during the onset the current GSM has already caused crop losses in the USA, China and elsewhere.

Learn more and subscribe at Adapt2020 where David Dubyne reports the facts about the weather that MSM is either misrepresenting or not reporting.

 

GSM Resources: