>>13785057The current weather systems of our world exist in a fragile thermodynamic equilibrium, they are metastable. The planet getting warmer in in of itself isn't the big issue, although it is bad. The problem is that global temperatures increasing also means that the amount of energy present in the atmosphere is also increasing. This abundance of free energy leads to more and more extreme weather with relatively small increases in temperature, but the average doesn't change much. When weather is predictable, we can build disaster resistant infrastructure to survive the damage of natural disasters with reduced economic impact.
But natural disasters aren't even our concern, compared to the biggest issue with unpredictable weather patterns which is the collapse of modern industrial agriculture. When farmers don't know what places will have what temperatures with how much rainfall, it becomes more and more complicated and difficult to achieve consistently high yields, leading to surging food prices. THATS the banger.
Let me put this into terms your retarded /pol/-brain can understand. Imagine the US-mexican border. You are trying to build a wall to keep the illegals out. You estimate that on average, migrant caravans group up into, lets say, groups of 5000. So you design each section of the wall to be able to resist an assault of 5000 people. This works well for years, until suddenly, migrants start grouping up into teams of 10 to 20 thousand. Despite the overall amount of migrants being the same, individual sections of the wall break down and they come through. So, even though your wall should be able to handle the amount of people coming through as a whole, because of dynamic instabilities of the system, pressure build up at certain points and leads to cascading failure.