Onward marches the Great Pause

Global temperature update: the Pause is now 18 years 2 months

Guest essay by Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Since October 1996 there has been no global warming at all (Fig. 1). This month’s RSS temperature plot pushes up the period without any global warming from 18 years 1 month to 18 years 2 months (indeed, very nearly 18 years 3 months). Will this devastating chart be displayed anywhere at the Lima conference? Don’t bet on it.

clip_image002

Figure 1. The least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS satellite monthly global mean surface temperature anomaly dataset shows no global warming for 18 years 2 months since October 1996.

The hiatus period of 18 years 2 months, or 218 months, is the farthest back one can go in the RSS satellite temperature record and still show a sub-zero trend.

What will the chart look like this time next year, at the beginning of the Paris world-government conference, at which the Treaty of Copenhagen will be dusted off and nodded through by the scientifically illiterate national negotiating delegates of almost 200 nations, ending the freedom and democracy of the West and putting absolute economic and political power in the hands of the grim secretariat of the UN climate convention?

When the November 2015 RSS data are available, how many years and months of zero global warming will have occurred? Enter our friendly competition by putting your best estimate in comments. For guidance, at the December 2012 Doha conference I was banned from UN climate yadayadathons for life for the grave sin of telling the truth that there had been no global warming for 16 years. And an el Nino of unknown magnitude is expected during the boreal winter, followed by a compensating la Nina.

clip_image004

Figure 2. Near-term projections of warming at a rate equivalent to 2.8 [1.9, 4.2] K/century, made with “substantial confidence” in IPCC (1990), January 1990 to November 2014 (orange region and red trend line), vs. observed anomalies (dark blue) and trend (bright blue) at less than 1.4 K/century equivalent, taken as the mean of the RSS and UAH satellite monthly mean lower-troposphere temperature anomalies.

A quarter-century after 1990, the global-warming outturn to date – expressed as the least-squares linear-regression trend on the mean of the RSS and UAH monthly global mean surface temperature anomalies – is 0.34 Cº, equivalent to just 1.4 Cº/century, or a little below half of the central estimate in IPCC (1990) and well below even the least estimate (Fig. 2).

The Great Pause is a growing embarrassment to those who had told us with “substantial confidence” that the science was settled and the debate over. Nature had other ideas. Though approaching 70 mutually incompatible and more or less implausible excuses for the Pause are appearing in nervous reviewed journals and among proselytizing scientists, the possibility that the Pause is occurring because the computer models are simply wrong about the sensitivity of temperature to manmade greenhouse gases can no longer be dismissed, and will be demonstrated in a major paper to be published shortly in the Orient’s leading science journal.

Remarkably, even the IPCC’s latest and much reduced near-term global-warming projections are also excessive (Fig. 3).

clip_image006

Figure 3. Predicted temperature change, January 2005 to October 2014, at a rate equivalent to 1.7 [1.0, 2.3] Cº/century (orange zone with thick red best-estimate trend line), compared with the observed anomalies (dark blue) and zero real-world trend (bright blue), taken as the average of the RSS and UAH satellite lower-troposphere temperature anomalies.

In 1990, the IPCC’s central estimate of near-term warming was higher by two-thirds than it is today. Then it was 2.8 C/century equivalent. Now it is just 1.7 Cº equivalent – and, as Fig. 3 shows, even that is proving to be a substantial exaggeration.

On the RSS satellite data, there has been no global warming statistically distinguishable from zero for more than 26 years. None of the models predicted that, in effect, there would be no global warming for a quarter of a century.

Key facts about global temperature

Ø The RSS satellite dataset shows no global warming at all for 218 months from October 1996 to November 2014 – more than half the 430-month satellite record.

Ø The global warming trend since 1900 is equivalent to 0.8 Cº per century. This is well within natural variability and may not have much to do with us.

Ø Since 1950, when a human influence on global temperature first became theoretically possible, the global warming trend has been equivalent to below 1.2 Cº per century.

Ø The fastest warming rate lasting ten years or more since 1950 occurred over the 33 years from 1974 to 2006. It was equivalent to 2.0 Cº per century.

Ø In 1990, the IPCC’s mid-range prediction of near-term warming was equivalent to 2.8 Cº per century, higher by two-thirds than its current prediction of 1.7 Cº/century.

Ø The global warming trend since 1990, when the IPCC wrote its first report, is equivalent to below 1.4 Cº per century – half of what the IPCC had then predicted.

Ø Though the IPCC has cut its near-term warming prediction, it has not cut its high-end business as usual centennial warming prediction of 4.8 Cº warming to 2100.

Ø The IPCC’s predicted 4.8 Cº warming by 2100 is well over twice the greatest rate of warming lasting more than ten years that has been measured since 1950.

Ø The IPCC’s 4.8 Cº-by-2100 prediction is almost four times the observed real-world warming trend since we might in theory have begun influencing it in 1950.

Ø From September 2001 to September 2014, the warming trend on the mean of the 5 global-temperature datasets is nil. No warming for 13 years 1 month.

Ø Recent extreme weather cannot be blamed on global warming, because there has not been any global warming. It is as simple as that.

 

 

Technical note

Our latest topical graph shows the least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS satellite monthly global mean lower-troposphere dataset for as far back as it is possible to go and still find a zero trend. The start-date is not “cherry-picked” so as to coincide with the temperature spike caused by the 1998 el Niño. Instead, it is calculated so as to find the longest period with a zero trend.

But is the RSS satellite dataset “cherry-picked”? No. There are good reasons to consider it the best of the five principal global-temperature datasets. The indefatigable Steven Goddard demonstrated in the autumn of 2014 that the RSS dataset – at least as far as the Historical Climate Network is concerned – shows less warm bias than the GISS or UAH records. The UAH record is shortly to be revised to reduce its warm bias and bring it closer to conformity with RSS.

clip_image008

Figure 4. Warm biases in temperature. RSS shows less bias than the UAH or GISS records. UAH, in its forthcoming Version 6.0, will be taking steps to reduce the warm bias in its global-temperature reporting.

Steven Goddard writes: “The graph compares UAH, RSS and GISS US temperatures with the actual measured US HCN stations. UAH and GISS both have a huge warming bias, while RSS is close to the measured daily temperature data. The small difference between RSS and HCN is probably because my HCN calculations are not gridded. My conclusion is that RSS is the only credible data set, and all the others have a spurious warming bias.”

Also, the RSS data show the 1998 Great El Nino more clearly than all other datasets. That el Nino, and that alone, caused widespread global coral bleaching, providing an independent verification that RSS is better able to capture such fluctuations without artificially filtering them out than other datasets.

Terrestrial temperatures are measured by thermometers. Thermometers correctly sited in rural areas away from manmade heat sources show warming rates appreciably below those that are published. The satellite datasets are based on measurements made by the most accurate thermometers available – platinum resistance thermometers, which provide an independent verification of the temperature measurements by checking via spaceward mirrors the known temperature of the cosmic background radiation, which is 1% of the freezing point of water, or just 2.73 degrees above absolute zero. It was by measuring minuscule variations in the cosmic background radiation that the NASA anisotropy probe determined the age of the Universe: 13.82 billion years.

The RSS graph (Fig. 1) is accurate. The data are lifted monthly straight from the RSS website. A computer algorithm reads them down from the text file, takes their mean and plots them automatically using an advanced routine that automatically adjusts the aspect ratio of the data window at both axes so as to show the data at maximum scale, for clarity.

The latest monthly data point is visually inspected to ensure that it has been correctly positioned. The light blue trend line plotted across the dark blue spline-curve that shows the actual data is determined by the method of least-squares linear regression, which calculates the y-intercept and slope of the line via two well-established and functionally identical equations that are compared with one another to ensure no discrepancy between them. The IPCC and most other agencies use linear regression to determine global temperature trends. Professor Phil Jones of the University of East Anglia recommends it in one of the Climategate emails. The method is appropriate because global temperature records exhibit little auto-regression.

Dr Stephen Farish, Professor of Epidemiological Statistics at the University of Melbourne, kindly verified the reliability of the algorithm that determines the trend on the graph and the correlation coefficient, which is very low because, though the data are highly variable, the trend is flat.

RSS itself is now taking a serious interest in the length of the Great Pause. Dr Carl Mears, the senior research scientist at RSS, discusses it at remss.com/blog/recent-slowing-rise-global-temperatures.

Dr Mears’ results are summarized in Fig. T1:

clip_image010

Figure T1. Output of 33 IPCC models (turquoise) compared with measured RSS global temperature change (black), 1979-2014. The transient coolings caused by the volcanic eruptions of Chichón (1983) and Pinatubo (1991) are shown, as is the spike in warming caused by the great el Niño of 1998.

Dr Mears writes:

“The denialists like to assume that the cause for the model/observation discrepancy is some kind of problem with the fundamental model physics, and they pooh-pooh any other sort of explanation.  This leads them to conclude, very likely erroneously, that the long-term sensitivity of the climate is much less than is currently thought.”

Dr Mears concedes the growing discrepancy between the RSS data and the models, but he alleges “cherry-picking” of the start-date for the global-temperature graph:

“Recently, a number of articles in the mainstream press have pointed out that there appears to have been little or no change in globally averaged temperature over the last two decades.  Because of this, we are getting a lot of questions along the lines of ‘I saw this plot on a denialist web site.  Is this really your data?’  While some of these reports have ‘cherry-picked’ their end points to make their evidence seem even stronger, there is not much doubt that the rate of warming since the late 1990s is less than that predicted by most of the IPCC AR5 simulations of historical climate.  … The denialists really like to fit trends starting in 1997, so that the huge 1997-98 ENSO event is at the start of their time series, resulting in a linear fit with the smallest possible slope.”

In fact, the spike in temperatures caused by the Great el Niño of 1998 is largely offset in the linear-trend calculation by two factors: the not dissimilar spike of the 2010 el Niño, and the sheer length of the Great Pause itself.

Replacing all the monthly RSS anomalies for 1998 with the mean anomaly value of 0.55 K that obtained during the 2010 el Niño and recalculating the trend from September 1996 [not Dr Mears’ “1997”] to September 2014 showed that the trend values “–0.00 C° (–0.00 C°/century)” in the unaltered data (Fig. 1) became “+0.00 C° (+0.00 C°/century)” in the recalculated graph. No cherry-picking, then.

The length of the Great Pause in global warming, significant though it now is, is of less importance than the ever-growing discrepancy between the temperature trends predicted by models and the far less exciting real-world temperature change that has been observed.

IPCC’s First Assessment Report predicted that global temperature would rise by 1.0 [0.7, 1.5] Cº to 2025, equivalent to 2.8 [1.9, 4.2] Cº per century. The executive summary asked, “How much confidence do we have in our predictions?” IPCC pointed out some uncertainties (clouds, oceans, etc.), but concluded:

“Nevertheless, … we have substantial confidence that models can predict at least the broad-scale features of climate change. … There are similarities between results from the coupled models using simple representations of the ocean and those using more sophisticated descriptions, and our understanding of such differences as do occur gives us some confidence in the results.”

That “substantial confidence” was substantial over-confidence. For the rate of global warming since 1990 is about half what the IPCC had then predicted.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

342 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Crispin in Waterloo
December 3, 2014 11:23 pm

It is interesting that those who have cherry-picked their way into comfortable nests of CO2 complain that others are doing what they did. He who does it well knows best I suppose.
If there was ever something cherry-picked it is the claim that CO2 caused the warming from 1976 to 1996. Prof Q Lu from Waterloo Univ calculated the correlation coefficient of temperatures and CO2 from 1850-1970. It is (R= -0.05). So much for that theory.

December 3, 2014 11:28 pm

And the same from TVNZ this evening, accompanied by film of forest fires, dried out river beds, dropping reservoir levels, Australian men cooling off under cold showers, etc. Then our weather presenter said “In contrast with what is happening worldwide, the hottest year on record in NZ was 1998”. No further explanation or excuse given. They really don’t know what they are talking about, but just swallow the religious message without thinking!

pat
December 3, 2014 11:54 pm

don’t expect Shukman to explain that everyone has admitted to the Pause in so many different ways:
3 Dec: BBC: David Shukman: World on course for warmest year
And he (Secretary-General of the WMO, Michel Jarraud) asserted that the new figures confirm the key trend in climate change: “There is no standstill in global warming.”
This is a reference to the hotly-debated “pause” in global warming which has seen no major increases in temperature since 1998. …
The WMO’s report on the state of the global climate is published every year to coincide with the UN’s annual negotiations on climate change, this time under way in Lima in Peru.
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-30311816
***more than “remarkable” mr. stott – try “unbelievable”:
3 Dec: UK Financial Times: Pilita Clark in Lima: This year on course to be warmest on record
To determine such a link, scientists use climate models to see how likely an abnormal event would be without the human greenhouse gas emissions driving global warming. Mr (Met Office Peter) Stott said it was ***“remarkable” to see a record year of heat occur in the absence of an El Nino…
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/95c1bd64-7ada-11e4-8646-00144feabdc0.html

Roy
December 4, 2014 12:15 am

There is obviously something wrong with our thermometers …

Evan Jones
Editor
Reply to  Roy
December 4, 2014 3:46 am

You’d be surprised.

Owen in GA
Reply to  Roy
December 4, 2014 8:04 am

That’s why we torture the data until it confesses to warming. Those thermometers just can’t be trusted!
(/sarc for those who need it)

ren
December 4, 2014 12:16 am
Martin A
December 4, 2014 12:37 am

Snowing here in Normandy (well to the South of anywhere in England).

steverichards1984
December 4, 2014 12:56 am

I could imagine that the people who run the RSS satellite coming under increasing pressure to ‘do something’ about this embarrassing pause. It only takes one ‘team member’ in a critical position within an organisation to subvert it. Either changing the data – unlikely or just performing an incorrect re-cal to give a slightly warmer temperature.
Difficult to make a change that could get through QA checks, but not impossible.

December 4, 2014 1:02 am

Reblogged this on Wolsten and commented:
And yet we pay insane amounts of subsidies for energy due to blind faith in impending climate catastrophe. Not sure why this isn’t a major political scandal. O, wait a minute, yes I do. All parties signed up to the Climate Change Act so they are all to blame.

knr
December 4, 2014 1:06 am

When the November 2015 RSS data are available, how many years and months of zero global warming will have occurred?
before or after ‘adjustments’ ?

Londo
December 4, 2014 1:08 am

I predict that RSS will be decommissioned if its data cannot be tweaked to show the same trend as the other datasets simply by removing its funding, possibly even claiming that the satellite is broken because it fails to show the “obvious” warming that media is reporting.

Siberian_Husky
December 4, 2014 1:14 am

[snip – fake name, fake email address, policy violation -mod]

Siberian_Husky
Reply to  Siberian_Husky
December 4, 2014 3:33 am

[Snip. Despicable, insulting comments like that belong on Hotwhopper, not here. Insulting readers with name-calling is not the way to get comments approved. Also, get a valid email address or don’t comment here. ~mod.]

pat
December 4, 2014 1:19 am

Christiana Figueres is back-tracking fast – did someone tell her it was insensitive/insane to say $100 billion annually “is frankly a very, very small sum”?
3 Dec: Reuters: Alister Doyle: UN sets modest hopes for climate pledges at 2015 Paris summit
Christiana Figueres, head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, told Reuters TV at 190-nation talks in Lima on limiting warming that it was unrealistic to expect a miracle solution at a U.N. summit in Paris in a year’s time…
“We already know, because we have a pretty good sense of what countries will be able to do in the short run, that the sum total of efforts (in Paris) will not be able to put us on the path for two degrees,” she said.
“We are not going to get there with the Paris agreement … We will get there over time,” she said during the Dec. 1-12 climate negotiations in Lima to prepare the Paris deal…
The mood at the Lima U.N. talks is far from the run-up to the Copenhagen summit in 2009, when governments tried and failed to agree a U.N. climate deal. At that time, many nations hoped for a sweeping new treaty.
Figueres said hopes this time are lower. “It is not about knocking people over the head and saying ‘now we have to miraculously solve climate change’,” she said…
The long-term goal is to reduce greenhouse gases to zero by 2100, a target she says will require leaving three-quarters of fossil fuels in the ground. “We just can’t afford to burn them,” she said.
In what Figueres called bad news, the U.N. weather agency said on Wednesday that 2014 is on track to be the warmest year on record, or among the very warmest
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/03/us-climatechange-lima-figueres-idUSKCN0JH2Q320141203

ferdberple
Reply to  pat
December 4, 2014 5:05 am

a target she says will require leaving three-quarters of fossil fuels in the ground. “We just can’t afford to burn them,” she said.
=============
having used cheap fossil fuel to industrialize, the EU fears competition from China and India is they also have access to cheap fossil fuel.
if we leave 3/4 of the fossil fuels in the ground, imagine the black market that will spring up. if we think drug wars are bad, think again what will happen once organized crime becomes the sole supplier for fossil fuels.

Owen in GA
Reply to  ferdberple
December 4, 2014 8:09 am

I could see special large sized submarines commissioned to carry natural gas past the naval forces interdicting its supply. If they worked it out right they could put all the connections underwater and hide the deliveries from prying eyes and call the submarines “Undersea Global Warming Research Vessels”

Reply to  ferdberple
December 4, 2014 9:12 am

Isn’t this the case already? Saudi’s, Russians, Venezuela, Iraq, Nigeria, none of them our friends. Drill Baby Drill…

Stephen Richards
December 4, 2014 1:24 am

Mears is a nasty piece of work, isn’t he? Denialist here, cherry pick there and then he goes on to try to make the models look as perfect as possible but lo and behold ………. they aren’t. OoooooH the pain he has in his heart.

December 4, 2014 1:27 am

What does the longest running record ( CET) show ? http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadcet/

Scottish Sceptic
December 4, 2014 1:28 am

Because the underlying natural variation is 1/f noise then that means the noise is fractal meaning that we can see the overall pattern reflected in subsegments .
And if we look for 2008 to mid-2010 we do indeed see the 1910-1940, the 1940-50 drop and then the rise from 1970-2000 followed by the 2000-2015 pause.
And therefore (by a magic waving of the hands argument which you shouldn’t take too seriously) … what follows after 2015 is indicated by the sharp decline shown on the graph from mid 2010 – 2011.
This decade will be known as the “2nd global cooling scare”, followed by the “2nd global warming scare”, “the third global cooling scare” and finally by the “climate change scare” as we re-enter the 2nd pause.

ferdberple
Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
December 4, 2014 5:15 am
pat
December 4, 2014 1:39 am

read the rest…
3 Dec: BBC: Why has the year 2014 been so hot?
Q) I thought there was a pause in global warming?
A) Global mean surface temperatures rose rapidly from the 1970s, but were relatively flat over the 15 years prior to 2013.
Many studies have reinforced a link between uptake of heat by the oceans and the “pause”.
The high surface temperatures of the Pacific and other parts of the world’s oceans might suggest that the pause is coming to an end, but there is no evidence yet to support this.
Climate scientists need more than one warm year to discern underlying trends.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-30311822

CodeTech
December 4, 2014 1:41 am

Some day in the future, humanity will look back on this time, soon to be known as “The Peak”, with fond longing as temperatures drop for several decades. They’ll somehow implicate human activity or emissions of some compound or another and try to legislate against it. Mortality from cold will continue to mount as energy is needlessly rationed.

Mark
Reply to  CodeTech
December 4, 2014 3:07 am

You should read Fallen Angels by Larry Niven & co. It’s an excellent treatise on how greenies will (not) drop an invalid theory in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Even if fictional, you can see all of the arguments & abuses being committed today.

CodeTech
Reply to  Mark
December 4, 2014 3:59 am

Larry Niven is among my favorite 3 authors (another being Isaac Asimov, his almost last book about carbon alarm notwithstanding). My friends stare, aghast, as I casually reference tasps, Scrith, and Pak Protectors…

Scottish Sceptic
December 4, 2014 1:44 am

Just a caution regarding this frequently abused term “statistically significant” as saying any trend is “statistically significant” is tantamount to saying it is Mann-made.
What this is actually trying to say is: “is this pause abnormal for the climate”. But that in turn is really the same as saying “is it within normality” and to know that we have to know what is normal.
Unfortunately, as far as I can see all these tests for statistical significance are false, because they rely on the concept that the underlying natural variation is such that the temperature one year is independent of the next. But clearly global temperature tends to be “sticky” so that we see decades when it is high and decades when it is low, so warm years tend to follow warm years and cold years tend to follow cold years. So it is perfectly normal to have a run of warm years as it is perfectly normal to have a run of cold years. And that applies as much to centuries and decades. So, we also see centuries when it is low (little ice age) and centuries when it is high (medieval warm period).
And once you accept that global temperature is “sticky” then these statistical tests have very little meaning.
To put it simply, we have to know what is normal before we know what is abnormal. So, “is it normal to have a period of three decades with warming as seen from 1970-2000 which caused this scare?” The answer is that we saw the same warming from 1910-1940 and CET shows many similar periods.
Likewise this article when it asks “is the pause statistically significant” is really asking the question “is a pause like this normal for the climate”. This is actually the wrong question because when we say “the pause is statistically significant” we are actually saying the “the pause is abnormal” … i.e. the pause must be mann-made.
The real answer, if one assumes the 1/f noise model, is that the pause is not statistically significant and nor was the late 20th century warming

ferdberple
Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
December 4, 2014 5:25 am

yes. all too many scientists assume climate is a “normal distribution” and then go on to classify anything outside of 2 STD as “abnormal”. however, time-series data in nature is almost never a “normal distribution”
as soon as you treat the data correctly, “abnormal weather” disappears. 1/f noise means that the longer the time period, the bigger the natural variability you should see. If you have 10 years of data, you should see 1 in 10 year storms. If you have 100 years of data, you should see 1 in 100 year storms.
What is changing isn’t the weather, it is the length of the data. We see record temp hot and cold because our records are increasing in length year by year.

exSSNcrew
Reply to  ferdberple
December 4, 2014 12:42 pm

Bingo. In “Applied Statistics and Probability” at the U., I sometimes got dinged for setting up the problem incorrectly using the wrong dist. I did the calculus correctly, but the setup was wrong so the conclusion was wrong. Serious stats work is hard. Climate models probably can never be accurate with linear sequential computers, even if they occupy acres and soak up terawatts. To really model this stuff properly, the models should be matrices of differential equations at very fine granularity. We simply do not have the tech to do that yet on a global scale. Electrical engineers use such matrices for control systems development, but we take liberties with the math and the matrix dimensions are very small.

Reply to  Scottish Sceptic
December 4, 2014 5:53 am

Indeed.
Although I’m fairly ignorant of statistics, I have the abiding feeling that “statistical significance” is used too often without proper reflection on what it intended to mean. It would help if every time it is used it would be explained by saying, “That is, if we make the following assumption, a trend greater than the observed one has less than a, say, 5% probability.” The important point is what precise assumption is being. I doubt that writers always have the assumption in mind, and, when then do, that most readers know what it is.
On that same note, at least this non-statistician finds it hard to recall each time what the term “model” means in this context. Those of us thus afflicted might be helped if we were reminded, for example, thus: “If we assume a zero-trend process with 1/f noise, a trend at least as great as the one observed has less than a 5% probability.”

Scottish Sceptic
December 4, 2014 1:51 am

I have just remembered a website I have which predicts the future of global climate which might help to explain 1/f noise
http://uburns.com/
Note: it just displays a random 1/f pattern so you can see the type of natural variation we expect from a system like the climate with 1/f noise.

pat
December 4, 2014 1:54 am

4 Dec: UK Daily Mail: Press Association: 2014 set to be world’s hottest year
Professor William Collins, professor of meteorology at the University of Reading, said: “The likely record warm temperatures this year add to the evidence that global warming is continuing its inevitable upward trend, and that we were right not to be lulled into a false sense of security by the slower warming of the last 15 years.”
Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed Davey said: “More record warm temperatures in the UK and across the world are yet more evidence that we need to act urgently to prevent dangerous climate change.
“UK actions such as our doubling of renewable electricity and our stretching targets for cutting carbon are a good start but we must be frank and acknowledge there is more to do.”…
WWF UK chief executive David Nussbaum said: “With countries meeting in Lima to lay the foundations for a climate deal to be agreed in Paris next year, this is yet another reminder of how our global climate is already changing.
“The UK has already seen increased flooding and other extreme weather events over recent years. Further climate change increases the likelihood of more of these in the UK and across the world. We need leaders to turn down the heat, by turning up their leadership on climate.”
(Sorry we are not currently accepting comments on this article)
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/pa/article-2859232/2014-set-worlds-hottest-year.html

Eugene WR Gallun
December 4, 2014 1:54 am

Gotta like Monckton
Eugene WR Gallun.

December 4, 2014 2:06 am

Lord Monckton, how long do we have to look at no warming (or even cooling) with CO2 going ever upwards before we can say that CO2 is not the cause of warming?

ferdberple
Reply to  markstoval
December 4, 2014 5:27 am

we will not be able to say CO2 is not the cause until the money runs out. at which point a new cause will be found.

Greg Woods
December 4, 2014 2:14 am

‘Global Warming’ is so yesterday. It is all about climate change now, and weird weather.

Reply to  Greg Woods
December 4, 2014 12:15 pm

If there was any weird weather.

Brandon Gates
December 4, 2014 2:14 am

Four articles in the last two days with plots showing dead level trend lines. Methinks the lady doth protest too much.

mpainter
Reply to  Brandon Gates
December 4, 2014 4:21 am

Pay close attention to these flat lines, Brandon; they have a message for you.

Brandon Gates
Reply to  mpainter
December 4, 2014 8:33 pm
Oatley
December 4, 2014 2:19 am

Meanwhile, back at the ranch…
For the third day in a row our city newspaper has run a climate change story. Each predicts catastrophe, record warming and the last ditch effort needed to save the world through binding world accords.
Folks, we are losing ground to media propoganda and we need a strategy here.

CodeTech
Reply to  Oatley
December 4, 2014 4:19 am

Open to suggestions… there IS no strategy. They have billions of dollars in media holdings, we have reality on our side. Don’t even think about Foxnews, it’s essentially poison to anything left of… hmm… Ayn Rand?
This is going on everywhere – the media tells everyone something demonstrably wrong, the only real question is the depth of their credulity. I try to engage people on forums, youtube videos, etc. and am relentlessly hounded by paid believers, and often my comments deleted.

ferdberple
Reply to  Oatley
December 4, 2014 5:30 am

the media have forgotten the story about the boy that cried wolf. they are hoping that a lie told often enough will become the truth.