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This year there has been an unprecedented number of southern tracking "cyclones"

You don't hear to much about the role of sulfur dioxide in global warming but it wasn't until around 1980 that worldwide So2 levels were lowered to lessen acid rain. It is after this time global warming really started to ramp up. Then in 1991 Mount Pinatubo cooled the globe for several years and possibly more. I'm not sure I'm convinced of how little global cooling is caused by lessening in solar activity as we recently have been near a solar minimum. If coal burning and especially low sulfur coal continues it will help to increase global warming. China is a big player in that regard.
 
Where is a site that talks about so2 levels for the past several decades and what the industrial output from different countries is according to the type of coal they burn? If China got their power from high sulfur coal for several years they could change global temperatures significantly. I feel global warming is allowing stronger storms to form further south as the temperatures offset lack of Coriolis effect.
 
If it formed near the equator and is moving it is moving in the south. Storms simultaneously form and move, that is what I mean.
 
Now a hurricane is moving south in the Central Pacific and it is near the equator less than 7 degrees north latitude and is expected to be only a few degrees of the equator.
 
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