By charles the moderator
From the “No matter what happens we can attribute it to Anthropogenic Climate Change” Department.

In a story in physorg.com James Overland of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, makes a few claims which will give some of our readers pause.
While it may seem counter-intuitive, warmer Arctic climes caused by climate change influence air pressure at the North Pole, shifting wind patterns in such a way as to boost cooling over adjacent swathes of the planet.
“Cold and snowy winters will be the rule rather than the exception,” said James Overland of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Continued rapid loss of ice will be an important driver of major change in the world’s climate system in the coming years, he said at an Olso meeting of scientists reviewing research from the two-year International Polar Year 2007-2008.
The exceptionally chilly winter of 2009-2010 in temperate zones of the northern hemisphere were connected to unique physical processes in the Arctic, he said.
“The emerging impact of greenhouse gases in an important factor in the changing Arctic,” he explained in a statement.
“What was not fully recognized until now is that a combination of an unusual warm period due to natural variability, loss of sea ice reflectivity, ocean heat storage, and changing wind patterns all working together to disrupt the memory and stability of the Arctic climate system,” he said.
The region is warming more than twice as fast as the rest of the planet, a phenomenon known as Arctic amplification.
Resulting ice loss is significantly greater than earlier climate models predicted.
The polar ice cap shrank to its smallest surface since records have been kept in 2007, and early data suggests it could become even smaller this summer.
Source here. Bolding mine.
Now just over a year ago, NOAA put this out, again quoting Overland.
“The Arctic is changing faster than anticipated,” said James Overland, an oceanographer at NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory and co-author of the study, which will appear April 3 in Geophysical Research Letters. “It’s a combination of natural variability, along with warmer air and sea conditions caused by increased greenhouse gases.”
Overland and his co-author, Muyin Wang, a University of Washington research scientist with the Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean in Seattle, analyzed projections from six computer models, including three with sophisticated sea ice physics capabilities. That data was then combined with observations of summer sea ice loss in 2007 and 2008.
The area covered by summer sea ice is expected to decline from its current 4.6 million square kilometers (about 1.8 million square miles) to about 1 million square kilometers (about 390,000 square miles) – a loss approximately two-fifths the size of the continental U.S. Much of the sea ice would remain in the area north of Canada and Greenland and decrease between Alaska and Russia in the Pacific Arctic.
“The Arctic is often called the ‘Earth’s refrigerator’ because the sea ice helps cool the planet by reflecting the sun’s radiation back into space,” said Wang. “With less ice, the sun’s warmth is instead absorbed by the open water, contributing to warmer temperatures in the water and the air.”
Bolding mine. Source again here. So… while this is not a direct contradiction, it is sort of a morphing of ideas. To paraphrase the what was not fully recognized.
We used to think that a warming Arctic with melting ice would be part of a warming trend, but instead, we got a lot of snow and cold weather, so the warming Arctic kinda messed with all those, you know, patterns and stuff like that we expected like. So that snow and rain and cold and other stuff we didn’t predict or expect… you know what I’m sayin’? It was caused by, you know, the crazy mixed up stuff caused by all that melting and warming and stuff, yeah…that’s it.
or to phrase it another way:
AGW moves in mysterious ways.
But the money shot is here from the physorg.com article.
It is unlikely that the Arctic can return to its previous condition, Overland said. The changes are irreversible.
It is likely someone will remind Dr. Overland of that statement in a few years.
h/t “K”
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“When the polar high pressure cells drift equatorward during a period of negative polar oscillations that allows more inflow of warm air into the polar regions at the same time as there is a greater flow of cold air to the mid latitudes….That seems to happen more often and/or with greater intensity when the solar surface is inactive as now”
The majority of solar minimums with fewer sunspots, actually are warmer than average for the mid lattitudes, its the minimums with higher SSN that tend to have more cold winters. The last couple of years are unusual in that SSN has been low, as well as absolute numbers of coronal holes, coupled with low solar wind speeds.
It is unlikely that the Arctic can return to its previous condition, Overland said. The changes are irreversible.
villabolo says:
June 14, 2010 at 4:20 pm
OMG that’s brilliant. You learn all that at RC?
The very fact that they’re willing to change their post-predictions so readily is suspicious in itself. After all, the last few years could be a ‘blip’, an effect of other factors that don’t affect long-term trends that the theory is meant to predict. In fact, there have been arguments of this sort bruited about in the recent past. (I don’t have the references at hand or a sufficient command of this material to provide pointers.)
In general, it doesn’t speak well for a theory whose predictions can turn on a dime, performing a 180-degree shift in the process. That’s what the Freudians were known for.
But I suppose that lability of this sort is one of the hallmarks of post-modern science.
@Cassandra King says:
June 13, 2010 at 11:34 pm
“This coming winter looks like it will be the hardest in living memory”
What makes you say that?
“What was not fully recognized until now …”
How many times do they have to say this before they get a hint that maybe they still lack “full recognition”?
Its like “Chicken Little” meets “The Boy Who Cried Wolf”.
stephen richards says:
June 14, 2010 at 4:27 am
Thank you so much, Stephen…
World cup news notes that the first snow in 20 years is falling in South Africa. Another goal for the IPCC! Or not.
lnocsifan says:
June 16, 2010 at 1:16 pm
World cup news notes that the first snow in 20 years is falling in South Africa. Another goal for the IPCC! Or not.
Heh! At least they didn’t say it was the worst first snow in 100 years, like the rains in Kentucky and the winds in Monterrey.