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How climate change is reshaping winter storms

A blast of winter cold doesn’t contradict climate change — it often reflects how a warming planet is making weather more extreme and less predictable.

January 27, 2026 / 12:13 IST
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How climate change is reshaping winter storms
How climate change is reshaping winter storms
Snapshot AI
  • Climate change shifts long-term patterns, not eliminating cold or winter storms
  • A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, leading to heavier winter precipitation
  • Extreme cold doesn't disprove climate change; weather is becoming more volatile.

Climate change does not mean the end of cold days. It means a shift in long-term patterns. Individual storms, even severe ones, sit on top of a steadily warming baseline driven by fossil-fuel emissions.

That’s why scientists consistently push back when cold snaps are used to question climate science. A single storm says little about long-term climate trends. What matters is how often extreme events occur, how intense they become, and how the atmosphere behaves overall, the New York Times reported.

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A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture

One of the clearest links between climate change and winter storms is moisture. As the atmosphere warms, it can hold more water vapour. When temperatures drop low enough, that extra moisture doesn’t disappear — it falls as heavier precipitation.