By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley The circumpolar vortex has put this season into the record-books. The United States has just gone through its coldest interequinoctial winter (equinox to equinox) in…
Day: March 26, 2014
With ENSO, chaos rules, models drool
A new paper in Nature from the Department of Oceanography, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, University of Hawaii, makes a somewhat surprising claim about predicting ENSO events.…
'Warming Interrruptus' – Causes for The Pause
By Dr. David Whitehouse The GWPF (video follows) Warming Interruptus What is the reason for the lack of warming observed at the surface of the Earth since about 1997? Many…
Marginal Parasitic Loss Rates
Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach There is a more global restatement of Murphy’s Law which says “Nature always sides with the hidden flaw”. Parasitic losses are an example of that…
The Sierra Club might be surprised to learn that some of these emissions aren't soot
Tom Nelson writes: Water vapor as “pollution”?: Sierra Club’s claims are based on opacity, which measures the thickness of emissions from a smoke stack by how much light passes through…
Stunning new first images available from NASA-JAXA Global Rain and Snowfall Satellite
Remote sensing of weather just got a lot more detailed and interesting NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) have released the first images captured by their newest Earth-observing…
When will climate feedbacks fully function? Not for millennia
Guest essay by Christopher Monckton of Brencheley The splendidly-titled Alberto Zaragoza Comendador, commenting on my recent posting taking apart Mr. Mann’s latest fantasia in Scientific American, was startled by my…
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