By Paul Homewood
I have been waiting to update the situation with regard to the flooding of the Somerset Levels. I had hoped to include the rainfall data for the local station at Yeovilton, but the Met Office still have not issued them yet. I have chased, but they say, understandably, they are too busy at the moment.
However, we can look at the numbers for the region, SW England & S Wales.
Let’s just recap the background. The problems started with heavy rainfall in the 2nd week of December, after a much drier than normal November. (The Levels are marked on the map below in red – to the best that my limited artistic talents allow!)
At the local station of Yeovilton, about 20 miles south, Met Office figures show that rainfall in November was 23% lower than normal. Given this, and the dry summer, river levels should have pretty low as December started.
During December and January, rainfall over the region amounted to 450mm, which is 165mm above the 1981-2010 average.
At Yeovilton, in December, rainfall was 43mm above normal. Although, as I say, January data is not yet available, rainfall maps don’t suggest that Somerset has been wetter than the rest of the region and indicate between 150mm and 200mm, against a normal of 67mm.
This would imply that December and January’s rainfall combined was probably about 120mm and 170mm above normal. This is all a long way round way of saying that the regional pattern looks pretty representative of Somerset.

If we look at 2-month precipitation numbers during autumn and winter in the region, we find that this latest period of December/January has been exceeded on eight occasions since 1910. (There are multiple events in two years, 1929/30 and 2001/01, which means that these eight occasions are spread over five years).
In other words, it is, on average, an event that happens pretty much every decade or so.
The graphs below show the three combinations – Oct/Nov, Nov/Dec and Dec/Jan. These are typically the wettest months of the year. Note that on all three graphs, I have shown the latest Dec/Jan plots in red, for comparison purposes. I would also point out that the year shown on the X-Axis is the “January year”. So, Dec 2013 to January 2014 is shown as 2014. This also applies to October to December – October 2013 to November 2013 is labelled as 2014. (A bit confusing, I know,but it keeps things consistent).
A couple of points stand out:
- 1929/30 stands well above the rest, and on all three graphs. More on this later.
- There is no evidence that recent years have been unusually wet, compared to earlier decades.
Comparisons with 1929/30
It already looks as if February will end up being another very wet month in the South West, so we may very well find that the 3-month total, for Dec-Feb, exceeds most other years since 1910.
Whatever the outcome, though, it does not look likely that the latest Dec-Feb figures will come any where close to the Nov-Jan period in 1929/30. If current trends remain, my guess would be for another 200mm this month, which would leave a total for the three months of about 650mm. This is well below the 812mm recorded from Nov 1929 to Jan 1930.
It would also come in lower than Oct – Dec 2000.
Summing up
So what should we learn from all of this?
1) While it has been an exceptionally wet winter in the South West of England, it is far too early to be talking about it being unprecedented, or to be looking for links to “climate change”.
2) As the graph below shows, precipitation during the “six winter months” has actually been at historically normal levels in recent years, and the trend looks to be a declining one. If nothing else, this rather makes a nonsense of the theory that global warming is leading to wetter winters.
3) Whilst the continuing wet weather is prolonging the agony for the Levels, the situation in December and January was not an unusual one. I will leave others to judge what effect the lack of dredging and other maintenance work has had on the floods.
4) If any year was “unprecedented”, it was 1929/30. (And as I have shown previously, the wet winter of that year affected the whole country.) I find it incredible that the Met Office have not carried out a detailed analysis of that winter, and indeed some of the other wet years, to see what they have in common with this winter.
There is little doubt that scientists such as HH Lamb would have done precisely that. Instead, we see a desperate attempt to find a link to “climate change”.
Surely, to do science properly, you should first look for natural causes for events such as these. And to do that, you have to learn from the past. Only then can we hope to understand the present and the future.
5) We have been bombarded with claims of record rainfall months, and forecasts of record winters. Meanwhile, David Cameron describes the Somerset floods as “biblical”. Am I the only one that cannot remember being told that 1929/30, or other years, were much wetter?
At least the media have an excuse – they are trying to sell newspapers. The Met Office have no excuse at all.
We deserve better.
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The current circulation of 850 hPa.
http://oi57.tinypic.com/2s7yx7c.jpg
Paul, excellent article as always, I feel very sorry for those people whose homes and businesses are flooded.
M Courtney
Hopefully more perceptive members of the press will ask the question, if you’ve known about climate change doing this for 20 years you’ve had time to prepare.
The EU have done nothing but publicise AGW, they have, by various directives made dredging of rivers, impossible. The Thames was not dredged because it would disturb an endangered mollusc, was one such excuse. Anyone who believes in AGW has no excuse for what has happened.
Instead of wasting money on HS2, why aren’t canals being dug, the areas are flat, they could be used to transport food and goods cheaply, the roads would be less busy and they would allow use and drainage of excess water?
Good thing the CAGW meme wasn’t on the scene in 1929-30.
Richard Barraclough
It’s a bit disingenuous to draw comparisons with a 3 month period of November to January 1929, when that year had a head start of nearly 200 mm in November, and it is the rain December to February which is causing all the flooding.
Just as the Nov to Jan 1930 rain would have done then.
Thank you for an interesting and enlightening article Paul.
My girlfriend works for the charity Mind, running a day centre for people suffering a wide range of mental health problems, including serious schizophrenia, paranoia and depression. The constant barrage of shallow minded and totally unfounded ‘extreme weather’ alarmism from the media (especially BBC) is causing a huge amount of anxiety and panic amongst her group members – some have genuinely started to believe the world is ending. It is having a huge detrimental effect on their health.
Also, to be honest, the frustration of hearing intelligent friends and relatives parrot this empty boilerplate AGW propaganda isn’t having a great effect on my health either!
I thought it might be helpful to be able to send your graphs around to people, but I think they would be stronger if they included sources for the data (or graphs themselves) in the graphics. Would it be possible to include these?
Sceptics fighting the ever rising tide of ‘extreme weather’ and ‘unprecedented’ BS would do well to point out that regardless of whether this year’s Winter rains in the UK are ‘unprecedented’ or not, evidence to tie their extremity to global warming would A) require an increase in global warming that correlated with an increase in the extremity of the rainfall, and B) a non-random distribution of years with heavy / light rainfall – ie. a trend. It doesn’t take any kind of statistical analysis to see that there is no trend in UK rainfall over the past century, just as there has been no trend in global temperatures over the last 10-17 years.
J Burns
This winter may be more of surprises.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/stratosphere/strat_a_f/gif_files/gfs_t100_nh_f240.gif
@MFO – the newsreel link is fascinating, especially the comment about these floods being a regular thing.
Thank you Movietone!
Watch out for attempts to airbrush (or destroy) history, by the Greenotards
Greg Goodman says:
February 14, 2014 at 1:50 am
A very informative article Paul. It definitely helps put things in perspective.
One, possibly important, criticism is the adoption of the word “normal” for the average over some arbitrary period.
“This would imply that December and January’s rainfall combined was probably about 120mm and 170mm above normal.”
There is nothing “normal” about the period 1981-2010. In a longer perspective it may have been drier that “normal”. There is no such thing as normal in a constantly changing system like climate and to use such a term (whatever period is taken) just implies that anything different to that arbitrary reference value is , by definition, ABNORMAL.
This just plays to current propaganda that presents every notable meteorological event as “extreme weather”.
If you need shorthand term to refer to “then average of the period 1981-2010″ , I would suggest “recent average” rather than “normal”.
Well researched article. Thanks for the effort.
I fully agree with Greg.
Thanks, Paul.
Measured and sensible.
GeeJam says:
February 14, 2014 at 1:25 am
Ah, but just this noon, the honourable former UK Gov. adviser, Lord Stern has assured us via Sky News, that all this misery is indeed the result of global warming, all 0.8C of it, says he. That this is exactly what was predicted by the good folk of Catastrophic/extreeme.inc and that we are now enjoying a preview of even more nasty events that are certain to follow. But there is a silver lining – if we all change our ways post haste and change to a new and glorious dispensation, we or for some of us/our kids/grand-kids may be spared.
Yeovilton rainfall totals for February to date are 128.8mm, 153% of normals:
http://www.met.reading.ac.uk/~brugge/CURR.html
Thankyou very much for this clear and concise article, Mr Homewood. I am adding a link to this page, to the references page for my cartoons (specifically for this cartoon:
http://www.itsnotclimatescience.com/0025.5.html
)
I get so sick of people saying weather is ‘unprecedented’ when it clearly isn’t.
I don’t know where we would be without sites like wattsupwiththat.com; the mainstream media is particularly useless on the topic of climate.
FTA: “I had hoped to include the rainfall data …, but the Met Office still have not issued them yet. I have chased, but they say, understandably, they are too busy at the moment.” Understandably? What, are they charged with running the pumps? Data used to be their business.
JJB MKI
I thought it might be helpful to be able to send your graphs around to people, but I think they would be stronger if they included sources for the data (or graphs themselves) in the graphics. Would it be possible to include these?
I have added them to the graphs on my website, rather than troubling Anthony.
http://notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com/2014/02/13/6989/
@Paul Homewood:
February 14, 2014 at 6:46 am
Thank you Paul! Much appreciated!
Solomon Green
Thank you. I stand corrected!
Brilliantly-informative post, Paul. Thanks very much, certainly tells it as it REALLY is, rather than having to listen to some twat politician saying what he thinks it is, or some twat called Slingo.
A local college run their own weather station in Taunton, approx 7 miles to the south west of flooded Burrowbridge on the levels. Rainfall totals are as follows: November 62.5mm, December 113.5mm, January 184.4, February (to 14th) 124mm. Total of 484mm broadly consistent with the figures in the article.This compares with 461mm in the same period last year,- not much more than the current year but with far less flood impact.
I didn’t notice this post about the floods, but it’s saying what some other commenters are saying, that abnormal environmentalist beliefs, not abnormal rainfall amounts, are driving the flooding problems: http://parekbasis.blogspot.co.uk/2014/02/the-religious-cause-of-recent-flooding.html
Richard Barraclough says:
February 14, 2014 at 5:02 am
“I think you’ll find this winter’s rainfall across England and Wales as a whole is definitely going to be “unprecedented” in the record which goes back to 1766”
Why leave out Scotland? I’d understood that storms were tracking south of usual because of the position of the jetstream. That would mean less rain than usual in Scotland.
[The] newspapers try to save “Doomsday” as a reinforcement word until “Biblical” becomes too common and paltry.
Thus we will hear of doomsday floodings and doomsday blizzards in the near future. You can’t save a good expression too long as the competitors may use it before you !
Paul Homewood wrote: “At the local station of Yeovilton, about 20 miles south, Met Office figures show that rainfall in November was 23% lower than normal. Given this, and the dry summer, river levels should have pretty low as December started.”
That would be a sound assumption to make but for decisions made by the Environment Agency. Water was penned (not released into the sea) in order to raise the water levels in the ditches and drains to benefit the wildlife there and to increase supplies of irrigation water. At the same time the EA had the area marked out as a downstream floodwater store in order to protect major settlements upstream. Two competing priorities – one to retain water for wildlife and future human need versus having enough empty space to store floodwater. It is like the mistakes made in operating Wivenhoe dam in Queensland but in miniature.
Let this banal and manifest truth go forth: Nothing could be more weird, unprecedented, unusual and extreme but that every region should experience only average weather for that region for the time of year.
This disaster was man-made. Check the story http://www.eureferendum.com – scroll down it’s about the third article.
Incredibly the UK dept. of Environment deliberately caused this by halting dredging of drainage ditches etc to help a return of nature. They should be hung.
Paul – please do update the analysis when the February data is in.
Considering a wider picture, can anyone provide the analysis on the overall probability (based on recorded data?) for the UK rainfall patterns of: 2012 summer, 2013 summer, 2014 winter so far ?