“Connect the Dots” for this one. Mother Nature has just proven how idiotic some one the arguments trying to link global warming and severe weather are: in this case, the “global warming makes more tornadoes” argument has just gone down in flames.

Given how hot July was in the USA, setting a new record high temperature for the continental United States, and given that the U.S. is the world’s tornado capital, and given the wailing of paid political shills like Joe Romm, Brad Johnson (who tried to get traction for a Twitter meme of #poisonedweather going) and weepy Bill McKibben, that tornadoes are exacerbated by global warming, you’d think Nature would have come through for them in July. By their twisted “logic”, with record heat, it would naturally come to pass that July had a record number of tornadoes, right? As John Belushi would say: “But nooooooo….”
It’s another CLIMATE FAIL, bring out Roger Pielke Jr.’s handy BS button, because Nature has just blown these idiots a raspberry. The only “poison” is their message. – Anthony
Guest post by Paul Homewood from Not a Lot of People Know That
NOAA has now released preliminary numbers for US tornadoes in July, showing that the remarkably quiet season seen up to June has continued. As the graph above indicates, April through July are by far the busiest months, so it is unlikely that the rest of the year will make any significant difference to the overall trend.
As at 6th August, preliminary tornado reports total 905, lower than any year since 2005. ( NOAA’s Storm Prediction Centre take about three months to finally confirm actual tornado numbers and classification ). Figure 2 attempts to compare trends since 1954, with “inflation adjusting” to compensate for changes in methods of detection over the years. Again, the number of tornadoes is very low by historical standards. (For more discussion on these topics, see here.)
Figure 1
Figure 2
July Report
Figure 3
According to data from the SPC, during July, there were only 24 preliminary tornado reports. This is the least number of tornadoes reported during the month since 23 tornadoes occurred in July 1950 and July 1951. It is possible the number will be revised lower once storm surveys are completed. On average, the U.S. experiences 134 tornadoes during July. This also marks the least active tornado month since January 2011, when 16 tornadoes were confirmed.
On July 28th, a tornado touched down along the northeastern slope of Mount Evans in Colorado at an elevation of approximately 11,900 feet above sea level. The location was remote and no structural damage or injuries were reported. The tornado was uncommon due to the high elevation of its occurrence, marking the second highest elevation at which a tornado has been observed in the nation. Mountainous terrain and high elevations typically create unfavorable conditions for tornadoes, making these events rare, but not impossible. The highest elevation of an observed tornado in the country occurred in July 2004 at 12,000 feet above sea level in California’s Sequoia National Park.
Confirmed numbers for March.
The SPC have confirmed the actual numbers for March, with a total of 82 tornadoes of EF-1 classification or greater. As in February, this was unusually high, comparing with the 1970-2011 March average of 42. Since 1950, the March total ranks 4th highest, behind 1976, 1961 and 1991. The total for 1976 of 147 was a good deal higher though.
Figure 4
Confirmed numbers for April
There were 81 confirmed tornadoes in April, close to the 1970-2011 average of 85.
Figure 5
Last year, of course, April was the worst on record, so what has changed. NOAA themselves admit that nobody really understands how tornadoes are formed, but do give some clues.
How do tornadoes form? The classic answer–”warm moist Gulf air meets cold Canadian air and dry air from the Rockies”–is a gross oversimplification. Many thunderstorms form under those conditions (near warm fronts, cold fronts and drylines respectively), which never even come close to producing tornadoes. Even when the large-scale environment is extremely favourable for tornadic thunderstorms, as in an SPC “High Risk” outlook, not every thunderstorm spawns a tornado. The truth is that we don’t fully understand.
Now take a look at the next two temperature maps from GISS for April, first last year and then this year.
There has been little change in the Gulf, where it has remained warm, but the cold air towards the North West that was so prevalent last year has simply disappeared this year. It seems that a warm Spring can have its advantages.
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A simple explanation..
ALL weather is driven by atmospheric differences. If the Arctic warms up more than the tropics, there is less “difference” to drive extreme weather events. (on a global average)
Unfortunately, that means less differences to move high pressure systems along, hence slightly longer periods of them nasty really hot periods. If they get stuck, the heat builds up, as y’all over there have just experienced.
ps.. consider this… If there were no differences in the atmosphere, there would be no “weather”
ummmmmmmmm !!! too much wine ..methinks 😉
Mr Lynn says: …It appears, however, that the entire exchange has been deleted from their Comments thread. Leastwise, I can’t find it.
I bookmark when I post on the wapo forum and archive it. I posted on a Glenn Kessler thread and rechecked a day later and my post was deleted so I reposted it. It was a list of democrats who signed the southern manifesto. They don’t like it when you ruin their narrative.
The claim that early season tornadoes are increasing also does not hold water.
The number of Jan – March tornadoes of F1+ averaged 70 from 2009-11. In the 1970’s the figure was 92 pa.
I live in Toronto. As of this past weekend it is abundantly clear that the summer heat wave is now over for southern Ontario. Today it is a high of 21C with rain and the rest of the week is not going to be hot. From a quick look at the rest of Canada you get a hodge podge of temperatures. Yellowknife has highs of 20-22 C this week. Whitehorse even warmer. Moosonee, way up in Northern Ontario warmer than Toronto. All of this will rapidly turn colder in September.
My sense is that we are going to have the same early cooling off that we did after Labor Day last year. It might end up being a very cold and wet winter. What to make of this? El Nino was entirely the major input to the long drought in the USA and the record floods in Japan and China. A few nights ago I watched an old 1995 documentary on plate techtonics. Showed how the Alvin sub went down to the bottom of the Mid Atlantic ridge and they saw their first glimpses of the small but very active “smokers”. The vents exhaust water and smoke at temperatures exceeding 720 F. What is not known even in the most smallest way is how many of these vents cover the vastness of the ocean floor, releasing hydrogen compounds, super heat, ash, lava and other compounds. Been going on for billions of years. No humans are involved. Yet it has an effect that we cannot even begin to measure.
Kelvin Vaughan says:
August 13, 2012 at 11:42 am
The UK has the greatest number of tornados in the world for its land size!
You, of course, have some published evidence for this statement?……No, I thought not.
@ur momisugly David Jones
The UK has the greatest number of tornados in the world for its land size.
You, of course, have some published evidence for this statement?……No, I thought not.
Actually I am pretty sure I have read this somewhere, but for the life of me can’t remember where!!
Rest assured they are extremely tiny ones though.
I usually copy the comment and its URL onto a text document, but on this occasion I forgot to do it. Oh well.
/Mr Lynn
Sure there is! You could try pounding your feet with a hammer, or digging out earwax with a long glass sliver, or rinsing your eyes with mud, or …
Install the Lazarus Add-on (FF, Chrome, Safari). Saves every comment you type, and the URL of the form/post it’s in. I’ve set mine to retain for 54 weeks instead of 14 minute, so I can search then jump to anything I’ve entered over that period, or copy it to the Clipboard for pasting, etc.
P.S. to above: Saves live as you type, so if you “lose” the connection, or a post vanishes or fails to enter, a right-click gives you a context menu option to re-enter it instantly.
Further to my comment about the frequency of early season tornadoes, I have had a chance to crank some numbers out.
Although this year was obviously high, there is absolutely no trend in the last few years, if anything a decrease.
http://notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com/2012/08/15/are-early-season-tornadoes-increasing/#more-1502