Study: Global Warming Causes Cold Winters

Boston, Massachusetts
Boston, Massachusetts. By Luke Nadeau from U.S. (Flickr) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

A study published in the Journal of Geophysical Research claims that global warming is the root cause of recent spate of cold winters in the Eastern United States. But don’t worry – as temperatures rise, the warming effect of global warming will overcome the cooling effect of global warming.

The abstract of the study;

Recent amplification of the North American winter temperature dipole

Deepti Singh,

Daniel L. Swain,

Justin S. Mankin,

Daniel E. Horton,

Leif N. Thomas,

Bala Rajaratnam,

Noah S. Diffenbaugh

During the winters of 2013–2014 and 2014–2015, anomalously warm temperatures in western North America and anomalously cool temperatures in eastern North America resulted in substantial human and environmental impacts. Motivated by the impacts of these concurrent temperature extremes and the intrinsic atmospheric linkage between weather conditions in the western and eastern United States, we investigate the occurrence of concurrent “warm-West/cool-East” surface temperature anomalies, which we call the “North American winter temperature dipole.” We find that, historically, warm-West/cool-East dipole conditions have been associated with anomalous mid-tropospheric ridging over western North America and downstream troughing over eastern North America. We also find that the occurrence and severity of warm-West/cool-East events have increased significantly between 1980 and 2015, driven largely by an increase in the frequency with which high-amplitude “ridge-trough” wave patterns result in simultaneous severe temperature conditions in both the West and East. Using a large single-model ensemble of climate simulations, we show that the observed positive trend in the warm-West/cool-East events is attributable to historical anthropogenic emissions including greenhouse gases, but that the co-occurrence of extreme western warmth and eastern cold will likely decrease in the future as winter temperatures warm dramatically across the continent, thereby reducing the occurrence of severely cold conditions in the East. Although our analysis is focused on one particular region, our analysis framework is generally transferable to the physical conditions shaping different types of extreme events around the globe.

Read more: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2016JD025116/full

What can I say – climate models seem to be much better at “explaining” climate events which have occurred, than predicting climate events which will occur.

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Caligula Jones
October 3, 2016 7:43 am

If climatologists keep this up, they’ll soon be mentioned in the same breath with economists. You know, the guys who are never wrong about anything, because they have an excuse for everything they get wrong.

dmacleo
October 3, 2016 9:57 am

so GW causes colder winters until it causes warmer winters.
and GW causes warmer summers and even more warmer summers…

Nylo
October 3, 2016 10:35 am

I have proof that the night causes the day. I have found the indisputable evidence: after the night, day immediately follows.

Gareth Phillips
Reply to  Nylo
October 3, 2016 11:40 am

Ever been North of the Arctic circle in Winter?

John
October 3, 2016 12:06 pm

I will read in more detail tomorrow, but it seems like they look at a relitively short time span, pick the last 3 years as prime example years, then explain the weather system setups, then overlay that against Co2 levels, see that it correlates, assume it is the cause, then make dire predictions.
What I find facinating is they investigate all these climate drivers and then just blindly link it to a Co2 driver. Co2 drives all and there isn’t anything it can not do.
Why did they not look back longer? Surely records exist to take this back to the 1900s…

Reply to  John
October 3, 2016 12:12 pm

John, such records exist. They show inescapably that climate varies significantly without CO2 driving it. A big problem for CAGW doctrine.

John
Reply to  charlieskeptic
October 3, 2016 12:27 pm

I frequent some weather forums and people often post weather charts from well before 1980. Obviously the temperature records exist as well…
Did they state why they looked at the years they did?

Reply to  John
October 3, 2016 12:40 pm

I assume those years were sufficient to prove what they wanted them to prove.

ulric lyons
October 3, 2016 3:21 pm

…we show that the observed positive trend in the warm-West/cool-East events is attributable to historical anthropogenic emissions including greenhouse gases, but that the co-occurrence of extreme western warmth and eastern cold will likely decrease in the future as winter temperatures warm dramatically across the continent …
That Which Creates Can Also Destroy… WOW

John
Reply to  ulric lyons
October 4, 2016 1:33 am

Well, it effectively means they can’t be wrong. While cold winters remain, CO2. When they drop off, CO2.
I do like the hypothesis, light on evidence and entirely on correlation, which isn’t causation, that can’t be proven wrong, as it is part of the hypothesis!