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The climate of Ireland is mild, humid and changeable with abundant rainfall and a lack of temperature extremes. Ireland 's climate is defined as a temperate oceanic climate , or Cfb on the Köppen climate classification system, a classification it shares with most of northwest Europe.
Ireland is an island nation and has an oceanic climate, both summers and winters are mild. Temperatures rarely go above 30 °C (86 °F), and rarely go under −10 °C (14 °F).
A comparable writer in Irish is Máirtín Ó Cadhain, whose 1949 novel Cré na Cille is regarded as a modernist masterpiece and has been translated into several languages. Modern Irish literature is often connected with its rural heritage [174] through English-language writers such as John McGahern and Seamus Heaney and Irish-language writers ...
Greenhouse gas emissions. Per-capita production-based greenhouse gas emissions in Ireland compared to the global average. Ireland's greenhouse gas emissions increased between 1990 and 2001 when they peaked at 70.46 Mt carbon dioxide equivalent before decreasing each year up to 2014. [3]
Ireland has an oceanic climate, cool and damp, cloudy and rainy throughout the year. Both the diurnal and the annual temperature ranges are narrow, so both the summer heat and the winter frost are rare.
Ahead of the depression centres, warm moist air is swept northwards while behind them colder, drier air is swept southwards. This gives the sequence of cloudy, humid weather with rain, followed by brighter, colder weather with showers so typical of the Irish climate.
ANNUAL MEAN TEMPERATURE. The temperature regime in Ireland is greatly affected by the moderating effect of the sea, and height above sea level. Mean annual temperatures generally range between 9°C and 10°C with the higher values in coastal regions. Mean annual minima show a stronger coastal effect than mean maxima.