Global Warming To Bring Colder/Warmer Winters

By Paul Homewood

It seems that every time we get some snow, another “scientist” is wheeled out to explain that, no matter how cold it gets, it is all down to global warming.

In the last week or so, we have had the International Arctic Research Centre announcing a study by three Chinese scientists, “Weakened cyclones, intensified anticyclones and recent extreme cold winter weather events in Eurasia “, with the headline “Climate change brings colder winters to Europe and Asia”. Then, we had WWF Russia blaming the blizzards in Russia on global warming.

But let’s, for one moment, remind ourselves of some of the “scientists” who have said the exact opposite.

UK Met Office

As recently as 2011, Julia Slingo and her team published an extremely thorough paper, “Climate: Observations, projections and impacts”. Running to some 153 pages, it looked at recent trends and future projections, both for the UK and the rest of the world. It made the following points:-

  • Analysis of mean temperatures in the UK showed a warming trend during the winter months of 0.23C/decade.
  • Describing the extreme cold in December 2010, it states:-

Severe winter weather affected Western and Central Europe throughout the first three weeks of December 2010, with the UK experiencing the coldest December for more than 100 years. This extreme cold weather was due to advection of cold arctic air associated with a strongly negative Arctic Oscillation.

The UK experienced two spells of severe winter weather with very low temperatures and significant snowfalls. The first of these spells lasted for two weeks from 25th November and saw persistent easterly or north-easterly winds bring bitterly cold air from northern Europe and Siberia. This spell of snow and freezing temperatures occurred unusually early in the winter, with the most significant and widespread snowfalls experienced in late November and early December since late November 1965. a second spell of severe weather began on 16th December as very cold Arctic air pushed down across the UK from the north.

  • Continuing its analysis of the 2010/11 winter, it finds that:-

The distributions of the December-January-February (DJF) mean regional temperature in recent years in the presence and absence of anthropogenic forcings are shown in Figure 7. Analyses with both models suggest that human influences on the climate have shifted the distributions to higher temperatures. The winter of 2010/11 is cold, as shown in Figure 7, as it lies near the cold tail of the seasonal temperature distribution for the climate influenced by anthropogenic forcings (distributions plotted in red). It is considerably warmer than the winter of 1962/63, which is the coldest since 1900 in the CRUTEM3 dataset. In the absence of human influences (green distributions), the season lies near the central sector of the temperature distribution and would therefore be an average season.

image

  • The winter time-series show a decrease in the number of cool days and cool nights.

So, to summarise, the Met Office believed that winters have been getting warmer, and that the winter of 2010/11 was caused by a natural event, the Arctic Oscillation, and, but for “human influences”, would actually have been a fairly average winter. (According to NOAA, similar conditions existed during the even colder winter in the UK of 1962/63).

Dr Myles Allen, and a few more!

In 2009, Dr Myles Allen, head of the Climate Dynamics group at Department of Physics, University of Oxford told the Daily Telegraph, during another spell of bad snow “Even though this is quite a cold winter by recent standards it is still perfectly consistent with predictions for global warming. If it wasn’t for global warming this cold snap would happen much more regularly. What is interesting is that we are now surprised by this kind of weather. I doubt we would have been in the 1950s because it was much more common. “

The report goes on to say “a study by the Met Office which went back 350 years shows that such extreme weather now only occurs every 20 years. Back in the pre-industrial days of Charles Dickens, it was a much more regular occurrence – hitting the country on average every five years or so.

This winter seems so bad precisely because it is now so unusual. In contrast the deep freezes of 1946-47 and 1962-63 were much colder – 5.3 F (2.97C) and 7.9 F (4.37C) cooler than the long-term norm.

And with global warming we can expect another 1962-63 winter only once every 1,100 years, compared with every 183 years before 1850. “

Meanwhile Dave Britton, a meteorologist and climate scientist at the Met Office, said: “Even with global warming you cannot rule out we will have a cold winter every so often. It sometimes rains in the Sahara but it is still a desert.”

Even Bob Ward, PR man for the warmist Grantham Foundation, keen to stop people thinking that cold winters did not mean global warming had stopped, said “Just as the wet summer of 2007 or recent heat waves cannot be attributed to global warming nor can this cold snap”

Don’t forget NCAR & NOAA!

Over in the US, they were just as keen to keep on message. An article in Phys.Org, “Experts: Cold snap doesn’t disprove global warming”, which was published in January 2010, had this to say:-

Whatever happened to global warming? Such weather doesn’t seem to fit with warnings from scientists that the Earth is warming because of greenhouse gases. But experts say the cold snap doesn’t disprove global warming at all – it’s just a blip in the long-term heating trend. “It’s part of natural variability,” said Gerald Meehl, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. With global warming, he said, “we’ll still have record cold temperatures. We’ll just have fewer of them.” Deke Arndt of the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C., noted that 2009 will rank among the 10 warmest years for Earth since 1880. Scientists say man-made climate change does have the potential to cause more frequent and more severe weather extremes, such as heat waves, storms, floods, droughts and even cold spells. But experts interviewed by The Associated Press did not connect the current frigid blast to climate change. So what is going on? “We basically have seen just a big outbreak of Arctic air” over populated areas of the Northern Hemisphere, Arndt said. “The Arctic air has really turned itself loose on us.” In the atmosphere, large rivers of air travel roughly west to east around the globe between the Arctic and the tropics. This air flow acts like a fence to keep Arctic air confined. But recently, this air flow has become bent into a pronounced zigzag pattern, meandering north and south. If you live in a place where it brings air up from the south, you get warm weather. In fact, record highs were reported this week in Washington state and Alaska. But in the eastern United States, like some other unlucky parts of the globe, Arctic air is swooping down from the north. And that’s how you get a temperature of 3 degrees in Beijing, a reading of minus-42 in mainland Norway, and 18 inches of snow in parts of Britain, where a member of Parliament who said the snow “clearly indicates a cooling trend” was jeered by colleagues. The zigzag pattern arises naturally from time to time, but it is not clear why it’s so strong right now, said Michelle L’Heureux, a meteorologist at the Climate Prediction Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The center says the pattern should begin to weaken in a week or two. Jeff Masters, director of meteorology for Weather Underground, a forecasting service, said he expects more typical winter weather across North America early next week. That will be welcome news in the South, where farmers have been trying to salvage millions of dollars’ worth of strawberries and other crops. On Miami Beach, tourists bundled up in woolen winter coats and hooded sweatshirts Wednesday beneath a clear blue sky. Some brazenly let the water wash over their feet and a few even lay out in bikinis and swimming trunks. A brisk wind blew and temperatures hovered in the 50s. “Last year we were swimming every day,” said Olivia Ruedinger of Hamburg, Germany. “I miss that.” Read more at: http://phys.org/news182026415.html#jCp

Whatever happened to global warming? Such weather doesn’t seem to fit with warnings from scientists that the Earth is warming because of greenhouse gases. But experts say the cold snap doesn’t disprove global warming at all – it’s just a blip in the long-term heating trend.

It’s part of natural variability,” said Gerald Meehl, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. With global warming, he said, “we’ll still have record cold temperatures. We’ll just have fewer of them.”

Deke Arndt of the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C., noted that 2009 will rank among the 10 warmest years for Earth since 1880. Scientists say man-made climate change does have the potential to cause more frequent and more severe weather extremes, such as heat waves, storms, floods, droughts and even cold spells. But experts interviewed by The Associated Press did not connect the current frigid blast to climate change.

So what is going on? “We basically have seen just a big outbreak of Arctic air” over populated areas of the Northern Hemisphere, Arndt said. “The Arctic air has really turned itself loose on us.”

In the atmosphere, large rivers of air travel roughly west to east around the globe between the Arctic and the tropics. This air flow acts like a fence to keep Arctic air confined. But recently, this air flow has become bent into a pronounced zigzag pattern, meandering north and south. If you live in a place where it brings air up from the south, you get warm weather. In fact, record highs were reported this week in Washington state and Alaska.

But in the eastern United States, like some other unlucky parts of the globe, Arctic air is swooping down from the north. And that’s how you get a temperature of 3 degrees in Beijing, a reading of minus-42 in mainland Norway, and 18 inches of snow in parts of Britain, where a member of Parliament who said the snow “clearly indicates a cooling trend” was jeered by colleagues.

 The zigzag pattern arises naturally from time to time, but it is not clear why it’s so strong right now, said Michelle L’Heureux, a meteorologist at the Climate Prediction Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Conclusion?

It seems to me that these these theories, that global warming will lead to colder winters, need to pass three tests before they can even cross the starting line:-

1) Explain how winters were as colder, or colder, and as snowy or snowier, in earlier periods such as the 1960’s and 70’s, when the NH was cooling, and Arctic ice expanding.

2) Explain how winters grew milder in the 1990’s and early 2000’s, at a time when the earth was warming, and Arctic ice was declining.

3) Prove what was wrong with earlier models that predicted milder winters.

Until these tests are passed, the theories really don’t get off the ground.

Footnote

Looking more closely at the Chinese study, mentioned above, by Zhang, Lu and Guan, their abstract states:-

Extreme cold winter weather events over Eurasia have occurred more frequently in recent years in spite of a warming global climate. To gain further insight into this regional mismatch with the global mean warming trend, we analyzed winter cyclone and anticyclone activities, and their interplay with the regional atmospheric circulation pattern characterized by the semi-permanent Siberian high. We found a persistent weakening of both cyclones and anticyclones between the 1990s and early 2000s, and a pronounced intensification of anticyclone activity afterwards. It is suggested that this intensified anticyclone activity drives the substantially strengthening and northwestward shifting/expanding Siberian high, and explains the decreased midlatitude Eurasian surface air temperature and the increased frequency of cold weather events. The weakened tropospheric midlatitude westerlies in the context of the intensified anticyclones would reduce the eastward propagation speed of Rossby waves, favoring persistence and further intensification of surface anticyclone systems.

Their methodology also tells us that the data used is from 1979-2012.

What they are saying then is that, in the 1990’s, conditions changed to a weakened state of cyclones and anticyclones, and therefore milder winters. In the last few years, it has changed back to a strengthened state. Although they have not analysed data back, at least, to the 1960’s, (which seems an amazing omission, that hugely undermines their work), the implication is clear, that recent conditions have returned to close to the ones that existed prior to 1990.

But none of that stops Zhang from saying “Decreased sea-ice cover favours further extension of warm air into the central Arctic Ocean. When this warm air propagates to the lower-latitude Eurasian continent, it gets cooled due to radiative heat loss. Anticyclones accordingly form or intensify.”

Before going on to say “We need to evaluate whether climate models can realistically capture weather-scale physical processes”, which, translated, means “Please send us some more grant money”.

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richardscourtney
February 10, 2013 5:27 am

Jan:
At February 10, 2013 at 1:45 am you say

A good scientist owes no allegiance to a particular point of view, and if s/he fakes data, s/he will be toast(ed) by her/his community.

Please view this link then explain why Hansen has not been “toast(ed)”.
http://jonova.s3.amazonaws.com/graphs/giss/hansen-giss-1940-1980.gif
Richard

markx
February 10, 2013 5:58 am

Jan says: February 10, 2013 at 1:45 am
“….Extremes are what were predicted and what have been found. ….”
You seem to have somehow managed to miss the point of the article.
We can find someone who pops up and says “yeah, I predicted this”, when in fact that is NOT what was the most vocal and most well known were saying in the past. The fact that they have now come up with a few ideas to explain the current happenings is not terribly convincing to some.
You do a nice job of stringing together a cascading series of happenings ‘required’ and you may end up being correct. But, its all pretty new and in contradiction to most earlier forecasts/projections/proclamations/visions (choose a suitable word) so please forgive me if I sit on the fence for now.
From the article (all comment were made 2009,2010):
2009, Dr Myles Allen, head of the Climate Dynamics group at Department of Physics, University of Oxford “Even though this is quite a cold winter by recent standards it is still perfectly consistent with predictions for global warming…”
Dave Britton, a meteorologist and climate scientist at the Met Office, said: “Even with global warming you cannot rule out we will have a cold winter every so often. It sometimes rains in the Sahara but it is still a desert.”
http://phys.org/news182026415.html#jCp “..Whatever happened to global warming? Such weather doesn’t seem to fit with warnings from scientists that the Earth is warming because of greenhouse gases. But experts say the cold snap doesn’t disprove global warming at all – it’s just a blip in the long-term heating trend…”
“It’s part of natural variability,” said Gerald Meehl, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. With global warming, he said, “we’ll still have record cold temperatures. We’ll just have fewer of them.”

Ie They are all saying “This was highly unusual, but its still gonna happen very occasionally”. But now you (and others) tell me this is the new normal.
You might want to revisit the conclusion here too:
1) Explain how winters were as cold, or colder, and as snowy or snowier, in earlier periods such as the 1960’s and 70’s, when the NH was cooling, and Arctic ice expanding.
2) Explain how winters grew milder in the 1990’s and early 2000’s, at a time when the earth was warming, and Arctic ice was declining.
3) Prove what was wrong with earlier models that predicted milder winters.
Until these tests are passed, the theories really don’t get off the ground.

Wamron
February 10, 2013 6:11 am

Re “Jan”
Jan, with due respect and you areprobably knowledgeable in your own sphere, but you clearly know nothing about what qualifies an activity or a discussion as scientific. Net data can be interpreted in an infinite number of ways. Only the capacity for accurate prediction makes an argument into a “scientific” theory.
I quote my earlier comment:
“A rumination is not science unless it offers both a hypothesis AND crucially a null hypothesis. AGW rumination doesnt clearly offer a former and more importantly never offers the latter. The important thing in respect of their discussion of weather is not the minutiae of climate and meterorology but the simple fact that they offer no circumstances which would confirm a null hypothesis. WHATEVER happens (colder, warmer, wetter, drier) they have a way of rationalising it as due to only one “cause”.
By that yard-stick alone it should be easy to ram home the fact that this is not about science but pseudo-science. Falsifyability is an alien concept to them. The basic notion common to all real science that correlation does not indicate causation is something that they ignore continually.An under-graduate in any topic, even psychology, should recognise thesetraits easily. ..”
Thre now, look up three concepts in the philosophy ofscience:Falsifyability, Null hypothesis and “correlation / causation”. Or if you prefer look up the namesof those figures who are to the philosophy of science what Newton andEinstein are to physics: Karl Popper and Imre Lakatosh.

markx
February 10, 2013 6:13 am

Jan says: February 10, 2013 at 1:45 am
“…. You are out to hustle, not inform….”
If you spend some time on here, you will see most are here to question, not hustle.
If you take the information we have received to date from the IPCC and various organizations and politicians, and have no questions whatsoever, then you either live a very naive existence, or simply do not care.
You can see that all scientists involved are still asking questions and every new happening and phenomenon is still requiring explanations, and often new and revised ones.
Its always worth asking questions, and now with IPCC revising their predicted warming to the lower bounds of their earlier estimates, we perhaps no longer have quite the pressure of having to act immediately, (ie the old, “its worse than we thought, its accelerating …do something.. anything.. but do it now!”)

February 10, 2013 6:44 am

Whenever it snows, our [snip . . try using “sceptical”, less pejorative and more accurate, thanks . . . mod] friends point to this as “proof” that global warming is not happening.
For the intelligent rebuttal to this canard, the Union of Concerned Scientists offers an excellent explanation:
http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/science_and_impacts/science/cold-snow-climate-change.html

markx
February 10, 2013 8:18 am

jfreed27 says: February 10, 2013 at 6:44 am
“….Whenever it snows, our …sceptical …friends point to this as “proof” that global warming is not happening…..
For the intelligent rebuttal to this canard, the Union of Concerned Scientists offers an excellent explanation:… http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/science_and_impacts/science/cold-snow-climate-change.html

Thanks jfreed!
Now, I’ve only got to the first line of the second paragraph before I had to come running back here to ask you a question: Do you think they forgot a phrase here?:
Original: Weather is what’s happening outside the door right now; today a snowstorm or a thunderstorm is approaching. Climate, on the other hand, is the pattern of weather measured over decades.
Should it not read: Weather is what’s happening outside the door right now; today a snowstorm or a thunderstorm is approaching. Climate, on the other hand, is the pattern of weather measured over decades. Unless the storm is called Sandy. Then its a harbinger of global warming, and not weather….
I think most in here are very happy to call the current snowstorms weather, and note that these sort of storms have occurred before. What we find disconcerting are statements that “this” is (now, just recently) “an expected consequence of CAGW”, and “an indicator of Extreme Weather resulting from Climate Change”.
When you guys read George Orwell, you were supposed to take it as a warning, not as a guidebook.
Further observations:
“These kinds of disasters may become a normal pattern in our everyday weather..
The Arctic summer sea ice extent broke all records during the end of the 2012 sea ice melt season. …researchers …pointing to a complex interplay between Arctic sea ice decline, ocean patterns, upper winds,…shifting shape of the jet stream that could lead to extreme weather in various portions of northern mid-latitudes … but this blizzard is occurring at a time when arctic ice extent is higher than it was at this time in 2005, 2006, 2007 2011 and 2012 … Is all this scientific evidence, or conjecture?
…destabilize the polar vortex….(NAO)—was in negative mode… This instability allows the cold Artic air to break free…. [But!?] It’s not clear how much impact this trend will have in the future, especially as the Arctic ice continues to lose mass.
Seems to me there is a whole lotta mumbling and handwaving going on there.

Chad Wozniak
February 10, 2013 9:59 pm

Steve B – yes, the alarmies seem to think water freezes when you heat it, don’t they? Methinks they have their temperature scales upside down.
Jan – The proof that AGW is false is very simple: add up all the sources of CO2, and man’s share of it is infinitesimal; add up all the other factors affecting climate, and CO2 is infinitesimal. Man’s role is, in mathematical terms, one over infinity squared.
You are quite wrong when you say commenters WUWT, or other climate blogs such as Climate,Etc. are just ranting abd not offering evidence to support these conclusions, simple and easily reached though they may be. Other posters here and on the other blogs offer a great deal of observational and other evidence of the falsity of AGW. You just need to read what they say.

Chad Wozniak
February 10, 2013 10:04 pm

Also – with the actual decline overall in temps since the peak of the 1930s, while CVO2w in the atmosphere increased ~40 percent -that would eem to offer pretty unarguable observational proof that CO2 is not a significant factor in global warming. Of course, the alarmies’ response to this is simply to keep repeating their lies. As a certain Joseph Goebbels once said, Repeat a lie enough times for a long enough time and eveyo9ne will take it as truth.
Memdacity makes the world of climate science go round.

Milovic Nikola
February 11, 2013 5:14 am

When there are many grandmothers, the children were ruptured. So with all the discussion about climate change and its causes.
I think that all previous assumptions about drivers of these changes on the wrong track. That there is at least one correct guess, so far to decipher and find everything. And this: None of it!!
The main causes of changes in the sun and the planets, including climate change, the mutual influences of the planets and the Sun. Let’s try again to everyone that we take seriously.
Sunspots are caused by effects of the planets: Venus, Earth, Mars and Jupiter.
A reconnection of the magnetic poles of the Sun “guilty” Jupiter and Saturn.
All these discussions ignore and dismiss as futile. You need to watch how they behave, which have to obey the laws of nature.
You have my address
Nikola

herkimer
February 11, 2013 7:35 am

Paper called Arctic waming, increasing snow cover and widespread boreal winter cooling
by Judah L Cohen, Jason C Furtado, Mathew A Balow, Vladmir A Alexeev, and Jessica E Cherry, published in Environmental Research Letter, December 2011. Here is their abstract.
Yet, while the planet has steadily
warmed, NH winters have recently grown more extreme
across the major industrialized centres. Record cold snaps and
heavy snowfall events across the United States, Europe and
East Asia garnered much public attention during the winters
of 2009/10 and 2010/11 (Blunden et al 2011, Cohen et al
2010).
Cohen et al (2009) argued that the occurrence of
more severe NH winter weather is a two-decade-long trend
starting around 1988. Whether the recent colder winters are a
consequence of internal variability or a response to changes in
boundary forcings resulting from climate change remains an
open question.
I did some checking to see if there was global winter cooling in other parts of the globe
1.] The winter temperatures for Contiguous United States have been dropping since 1990 at -0.26 F per decade [per NCDC]
2] 8 of the 11 climate regions in Canada showed declining winter temperature departures for 15 years since 1998
.3] The winter temperature departures from 1961-1990 mean normals for land and sea regions of Europe have been flat or even slightly dropping for 20 year or since 1990
4] I have not checked all of Asia but Moscow winter temperatures have been declining since 1988
I think it is too ealy to say if winters are getting colder or warmer until we go through a complete cool cycle also [ ie the next 20-30 years ] The coldest winters are during these cold troughs

herkimer
February 11, 2013 9:02 am

Paul
I think if you check the winter temperature trend per the Met Office own data for Central UK since 1989 or the last 22 years, the trend is negative or declining . I think the analysis would be the same for all of UK . So I think it is significant that the Met Office are saying the winters are getting warmer when in fact they have declined slightly or been flat for the last two decades . Who is misleading who?

herkimer
February 11, 2013 12:03 pm

http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadcet/data/download.html
Paul
If you run the winter temperature data from the Met Office web referenced above for both UK as the whole or CET for the years 1989-2012, both will show declining linear temperature trend for the last 22 years . . If you choose1962 , the coldest winter for your comparison you will most likely show winter warming only over a 50 year period . If you choose 1989 , like I did you will show cooling . If you forget about 1989 but look at the last two decades there no real warming trend at all , fluctuations yes but no real warming and if you look at the graph from 1910 to the present , there is no warming trend, fluctuations yes . For the Met Office , who clearly know all this ,to project winter warming using this data is misleading especially looking a century ahead .

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