I
continue to note that the Arctic has been able
to retain its apparent dominant heat signature through all this. Sometime at
least thirty years ago, the heat been transferred from the tropics into the Arctic made an incremental increase, which we may
describe as delta H. This has continued
unabated ever since and now continues into next year.
This
remarkable report describes the continuing observations. The resultant
changes have kicked us this winter, but has changed nothing else. The sea ice is continuing to rot apace and if
this is all correct, we are now entering a protracted period of semi open Arctic
seas in the late summer. I do think that
the stage is set for a total breakup like event in 2012, although we have
claims of ice reversal that seems creditable.
The
fact is that the statistical data systems continue to paint a warmer globe. Yet this is a position that I deeply
mistrust. A shift of real heat into the Arctic is real and has been seen before and seems to
follow a millennial cycle. So far so
good. However, on a global basis, I think
that the data gathering itself is subject to serious upward creep that we have
been unable to correct properly for. It
is not much, but a half of a degree is all we have to begin with. An error here and an error there always made
on the upside soon accumulates to give you this. The best data had exactly that problem in
spades.
I
not no one has the guts to correct it using annual tree rings.
That snow outside is what global warming
looks like
Unusually cold winters may make you think
scientists have got it all wrong. But the data reveal a chilling truth
A zebra stands in its snow-covered pen at Whipsnade Zoo, north of London on December 20,
2010 Photograph: Max Nash/AFP/Getty Images
There were two silent calls, followed by a message left on my
voicemail. She had a soft, gentle voice and a mid-Wales accent. "You are a
liar, Mr Monbiot. You and James Hansen and all your lying
colleagues. I'm going to make you pay back the money my son gave to your
causes. It's minus 18C and my pipes have frozen. You liar. Is this your global
warming?" She's not going to like the answer, and nor are you. It may be
yes.
There is now strong evidence to suggest that the unusually cold winters
of the last two years in the UK
are the result of heating elsewhere. With the help of the severe weather
analyst John Mason and the Climate
Science Rapid Response Team, I've been through as much of the
scientific literature as I can lay hands on (see my website for the
references). Here's what seems to be happening.
The global temperature maps published
by Nasa present a striking picture. Last month's shows a deep
blue splodge over Iceland ,
Spitsbergen, Scandanavia and the UK , and another over the western US
and eastern Pacific. Temperatures in these regions were between 0.5C and 4C
colder than the November average from 1951 and 1980. But on either side of
these cool blue pools are raging fires of orange, red and maroon: the
temperatures in western Greenland, northern Canada
and Siberia were between 2C and 10C higher
than usual. Nasa's Arctic oscillations map for 3-10 December shows that parts
of Baffin Island and central Greenland were
15C warmer than the average for 2002-9. There was a similar pattern last
winter. These anomalies appear to be connected.
The weather we get in UK winters, for example, is strongly linked to
the contrasting pressure between the Icelandic low and the Azores
high. When there's a big pressure difference the winds come in from the
south-west, bringing mild damp weather from the Atlantic .
When there's a smaller gradient, air is often able to flow down from the Arctic . High pressure in the icy north last winter,
according to the US National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, blocked the usual pattern and
"allowed cold air from the Arctic to penetrate all the way into Europe,
eastern China , and Washington DC ".
Nasa reports that the same thing is happening this winter.
Sea ice in the Arctic
has two main effects on the weather. Because it's white, it bounces back heat
from the sun, preventing it from entering the sea. It also creates a barrier
between the water and the atmosphere, reducing the amount of heat that escapes
from the sea into the air. In the autumns of 2009 and 2010 the coverage of
Arctic sea ice was much lower than the long-term average: the second smallest,
last month, of any recorded November. The open sea, being darker, absorbed more
heat from the sun in the warmer, light months. As it remained clear for longer
than usual it also bled more heat into the Arctic atmosphere. This caused
higher air pressures, reducing the gradient between the Iceland low and the Azores
high.
So why wasn't this predicted by climate scientists? Actually it was,
and we missed it. Obsessed by possible changes to ocean circulation (the Gulf Stream grinding to a halt), we overlooked
the effects on atmospheric circulation. A link between summer sea ice in
the Arctic and winter temperatures in the
northern hemisphere was first proposed in 1914. Close mapping of the
relationship dates back to 1990, and has been strengthened by detailed
modelling since 2006.
Will this become the pattern? It's not yet clear. Vladimir Petoukhov of the Potsdam Institute says
that the effects of shrinking sea ice "could triple the probability of
cold winter extremes in Europe and northern Asia ".
James Hansen of Nasa counters that seven of the last 10 European winters were
warmer than average. There are plenty of other variables: we can't predict the
depth of British winters solely by the extent of sea ice.
I can already hear the howls of execration:
now you're claiming that this cooling is the result of warming! Well, yes, it
could be. A global warming trend doesn't mean that every region becomes warmer
every month. That's what averages are for: they put local events in context.
The denial of man-made climate change mutated first into a denial of science in
general and then into a denial of basic arithmetic. If it's snowing in Britain , a
thousand websites and quite a few newspapers tell us, the planet can't be
warming.
According to Nasa's datasets, the world has
just experienced the warmest January to November period since the global record
began, 131 years ago; 2010 looks likely to be either the hottest or the equal
hottest year. This November was the warmest on record.
Sod all that, my correspondents insist: just look out of the window. No
explanation of the numbers, no description of the North Atlantic oscillation or
the Arctic
dipole, no reminder of current temperatures in other parts of the
world, can compete with the observation that there's a foot of snow outside. We
are simple, earthy creatures, governed by our senses. What we see and
taste and feel overrides analysis. The cold has reason in a deathly
grip.
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