DROUGHT AND FLOODS CAUSED BY EMISSION

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DROUGHT AND FLOODS CAUSED BY EMISSION

Along with increases in human emissions, the time of natural events that climate scientists expect to happen in the near future has been pushed forward.

In addition to the historic high temperatures seen in the summer, flooding in areas such as Germany has worried scientists. It was calculated that these natural events, the expected consequences of global warming, would occur in later years. But climate disasters such as floods, wildfires and droughts from North America to Central Asia are not decimated.

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IT WILL BE MORE EXTREME

An expert at the European Centre for Weather Forecasts, said: “We expect all hydro-meteorological extremes to become more extreme with climate change. What we are seeing in Germany is largely consistent with this trend,” he said.

According to analysis in the Guardian, climatic events are raising fears that human-caused disruption is making extreme weather worse than predicted.

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CLIMATOLOGISTS WORRY ” THRESHOLD HAS BEEN EXCEEDED ”

Climate scientists have long predicted that human-induced emissions will cause more floods, heatwaves, droughts, storms and other extreme weather events. But the recent spikes have also raised concerns among scientists that “the threshold has been exceeded.” A climate scientist at the University of California, said that a large number of records were broken in the United States this summer, and now this is attracting less media attention. “USA is often the centre of attention, but we’ve also seen extraordinary temperature events in Northern Europe and Siberia, ” said. It’s not a local freak event, it’s definitely part of a consistent global pattern.”

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President of Organ Transplant Center at MedicalPark Hospital Antalya

Turkey's world-renowned organ transplant specialist. Dr. Demirbaş has 104 international publications and 102 national publications.

Physician's Resume:

Born on August 7, 1963 in Çorum, Prof. Dr. Alper Demirbaş has been continuing his work as the President of MedicalPark Antalya Hospital Organ Transplantation Center since 2008.

Prof. who performed the first tissue incompatible kidney transplant in Turkey, the first blood type incompatible kidney transplant, the first kidney-pancreas transplant program and the first cadaveric donor and live donor liver transplant in Antalya. Dr. As of August 2016, Alper Demirbaş has performed 4900 kidney transplants, 500 liver transplants and 95 pancreas transplants.

In addition to being the chairman of 6 national congresses, he has also been an invited speaker at 12 international and 65 national scientific congresses. Dr. Alper Demirbaş was married and the father of 1 girl and 1 boy.

Awards:

Eczacibasi Medical Award of 2002, Akdeniz University Service Award of 2005, Izder Medical Man of the Year Award of 2006, BÖHAK Medical Man of the Year Award of 2007, Sabah Mediterranean Newspaper Scientist of the Year Award of 2007, ANTIKAD Scientist of the Year Award of 2009, Social Ethics Association Award of 2010, Işık University Medical Man of the Year Award of 2015, VTV Antalya's Brand Value Award of 2015.

Certificates:

Doctor of Medicine Degree Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine Ankara, General Surgeon Ministry of Health Turkey EKFMG (0-477-343-8), University of Miami School of Medicine Member of Multiple Organ Transplant, ASTS Multiorgan Transplant Scholarship. Lecturer at Kyoto University. Lecturer at University of Essen, Research assistant at the University of Cambridge .

Professional Members:

American Society of Transplant Surgeons, American Transplantation Society Nominated, Middle East and Southern Africa Council Transplantation Society 2007, International Liver Transplantation Association, Turkish Transplantation Association, Turkish Society of Surgery, Turkish Hepatobiliary Surgery Association.

Disclaimer:

Our website contents consist of articles approved by our Web and Medical Editorial Board with the contributions of our physicians. Our contents are prepared only for informational purposes for public benefit. Be sure to consult your doctor for diagnosis and treatment.
Medically Reviewed by Professor Doctor Alper Demirbaş
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