2013 was a cool year in many ways. Most interestingly, the last year this split between highs and lows happened in the USA, in 1993, we had the eruption from Mt. Pinatubo the prior year which ejected so much aerosol into the atmosphere that it blocked sunlight and cooled the planet.
Source: http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:1978
This year, 2013, we have no similar large volcanic influence, and so the cause can’t be pinned on an specific aerosol event. It seems that natural variation played a bigger role this time. It also says much about Hansen’s “loaded climate dice”
This table from NCDC pretty well sums up the headline.
Source: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/extremes/records/
Note also the “Last Year to Date” line on the bottom. in 2013, we have less than one-third of the number of record highs as in 2012.
h/t to Doyle Rice at USAToday.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/weather/2013/12/31/record-cold-temperatures/4264237/
Here, from the Wayback Machine, is last year’s table from NCDC:
if anyone has any similar weather record comparisons for the rest of the world, don’t hesitate to list them in comments.
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eric1skeptik
You are correct about 2011 being perhaps more significant [ the highest number of US spring tornadoes] . However when i wrote the blog , the 2013 very cold spring season in the Canadian Prairies was still fresh in my mind together with the 247 tornadoes in May 2013 in United States including two very big tornadoes ,a F4 and a F5 . The spring of 2013 was the 14th coldest spring for the Canadian Prairies at -2.3 C below average . 2011 was also cold at -1.6 C below average [ 1961-1990 averages]. 1974 was -2.8 below average .
Pft it’s just the mysterious heat pump transferring heat into the deep ocean. Explaining away inconvenient truths in ways that break the laws of physics is what climactivists excel at.