Could it be that one is an effect of another? 
For example, water is excellent thermal mass. Dry out an area from diverting water and you remove the area's humidity. You remove it's stability as well. Then the land is then exposed to direct thermal extremes that come and go with the amount of sun you experience per year.
I'll use where i live as another example. We are technically in a high desert region, at >4000ft elevation. Our temperatures have had more extreme swings the more the population grows and thus the more the water is diverted or used otherwise. Where i live was once tropical and had a moderate climate, tens of thousands of years ago. Manmade irrigation, going back to the Native Americans who lived here long long ago, have drained our salt lake and Utah lake. And the people here keep popping babies out at a record rate and building new houses like crazy. Come visit in 50 years and see what happens!
If you live in an area with heavy evaporation ( like on the coast, particularly if you are significantly north or south of the equator line ), then more heat means more evaporation, which means more water being lifted from one area and being poured out on another. Where you live is more likely to become more tropical and less dry.
What won't be affected much is the areas around the equator. They will get a little hotter, but with a steady 12 hours of sunlight all year round, they will not see the extremes that we see.
Yes, the ocean can rise about 200 feet. You will have to adapt. Buy a house at 250 foot elevation and enjoy the rise of your property value in your old age
For example, water is excellent thermal mass. Dry out an area from diverting water and you remove the area's humidity. You remove it's stability as well. Then the land is then exposed to direct thermal extremes that come and go with the amount of sun you experience per year.
I'll use where i live as another example. We are technically in a high desert region, at >4000ft elevation. Our temperatures have had more extreme swings the more the population grows and thus the more the water is diverted or used otherwise. Where i live was once tropical and had a moderate climate, tens of thousands of years ago. Manmade irrigation, going back to the Native Americans who lived here long long ago, have drained our salt lake and Utah lake. And the people here keep popping babies out at a record rate and building new houses like crazy. Come visit in 50 years and see what happens!
If you live in an area with heavy evaporation ( like on the coast, particularly if you are significantly north or south of the equator line ), then more heat means more evaporation, which means more water being lifted from one area and being poured out on another. Where you live is more likely to become more tropical and less dry.
What won't be affected much is the areas around the equator. They will get a little hotter, but with a steady 12 hours of sunlight all year round, they will not see the extremes that we see.
Yes, the ocean can rise about 200 feet. You will have to adapt. Buy a house at 250 foot elevation and enjoy the rise of your property value in your old age
