Claim: Arctic warming is influencing the UK’s extreme weather

MODIS imagery of the UK on January 8, 2010, showing essentially complete snowfall coverage

From the UNIVERSITY OF LINCOLN, where they are trying to make the North Atlantic Oscillation bend to their will part of climate change.

Severe snowy weather in winter or extreme rains in summer in the UK might be influenced by warming trends in the Arctic, according to new findings.

Climate scientists from the UK and the US examined historic data of extreme weather events in the UK over the past decade and compared them with the position of the North Atlantic polar atmospheric jet steam using a measure called the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) index.

The NAO indicates the position of the jet stream – which is a giant current of air that broadly flows eastwards over mid-latitude regions around the globe – through a diagram which shows ‘negative’ and ‘positive’ spikes, similar to how a heart monitor looks.

The researchers highlight that the exceptionally wet UK summers of 2007 and 2012 had notably negative readings of the NAO, as did the cold, snowy winters of 2009/2010 and 2010/2011, while the exceptionally mild, wet, stormy winters experienced in 2013/2014 and 2015/2016 showed pronounced positive spikes.

The scientists also highlighted a correlation between the jet stream’s altered path over the past decade – so-called jet stream ‘waviness’ – and an increase during summer months in a phenomenon called Greenland high-pressure blocking, which represents areas of high pressure that remain nearly stationary over the Greenland region and distort the usual progression of storms across the North Atlantic.

Increased jet waviness is associated with a weakening of the jet stream, and the accompanying ‘blocking’ is linked to some of the most extreme UK seasonal weather events experienced over the past decade. The strength and path of the North Atlantic jet stream and the Greenland blocking phenomena appear to be influenced by increasing temperatures in the Arctic which have averaged at least twice the global warming rate over the past two decades, suggesting that those marked changes may be a key factor affecting extreme weather conditions over the UK, although an Arctic connection may not occur each year.

Edward Hanna, Professor of Climate Science and Meteorology at the University of Lincoln’s School of Geography, carried out the study with Dr Richard Hall, also from the University of Lincoln, and Professor James E Overland from the US National Oceanographic & Atmospheric Administration Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory.

Professor Hanna said:

“Arctic warming may be driving recent North Atlantic atmospheric circulation changes that are linked to some of the most extreme weather events in the UK over the last decade.

“In winter, a positive North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is linked with a more northward, vigorous jet and mild, wet, stormy weather over the UK, while a negative NAO tends to be associated with a more southerly-positioned jet and relatively cold and dry but sometimes snowy conditions. In summer the jet stream is displaced further north, so a positive NAO is typically associated with warm dry weather, while a negative NAO often corresponds to wetter, cooler UK weather conditions.

“While part of the uneven seasonal North Atlantic Oscillation changes might be due to natural random fluctuations in atmospheric circulation, the statistically highly unusual clustering of extreme NAO values in early winter, as well as extreme high summer Greenland Blocking Index values since 2000, suggest a more sustained, systematic change in the North Atlantic atmospheric circulation that may be influenced by longer-term external factors. This includes possible influences from the tropical oceans and solar energy changes as well as the extreme warming that has recently occurred in the Arctic.

“Of course, weather is naturally chaotic, and extremes are a normal part of our highly variable UK climate, but globally there has recently been an increase in the incidence of high temperature and heavy precipitation extremes. The cold UK winter episodes we noted are not so intuitively linked to global climate change but reflect part of a long-term trend towards more variable North Atlantic atmospheric circulation from year to year during winter months, especially early winter.

“This trend has culminated in the last decade having several record negative and positive December values of the North Atlantic Oscillation, with lots of resulting disruption from extreme weather over the UK. On the other hand there has been no really notably dry, hot, sunny summer in the UK since 2006; summers overall have either been around average or exceptionally wet, and this appears to be linked with strong warming and more frequent high pressure over Greenland in the last decade.”

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The study has been published in Weather, the magazine of the Royal Meteorological Society, where apparently “tantalising clues” is part of the science lexicon now.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wea.2981/abstract;jsessionid=EA81D6A2FED40E10F2BC458FA4D5C17B.f01t01

Abstract

We explore a possible relation between the recent Arctic amplification of global warming and changes in North Atlantic jet stream circulation and UK extreme weather conditions over the last decade. Such a link is supported by some tantalising clues from recent North Atlantic atmospheric circulation changes in summer and winter, but due to multiple factors affecting jet stream variability, we need extended records over at least a further decade to more reliably attribute these changes to global warming.

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January 5, 2018 4:26 am

NOAA temps (https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/) for the contiguous United States show …

Min F

Winter 1997-2006 24.38
Winter 2007-2016 22.97
Down 1.41F

Spring 1997-2006 39.85
Spring 2007-2016 40.02
Up 0.17F

Summer 1997-2006 59.54
Summer 2007-2016 60.01
Up 0.47F

Autumn 1997-2006 42.65
Autumn 2007-2016 43.36
Up 0.71F

Annuals 1997-2006 41.61
Annuals 2007-2016 41.59
Down 0.02F

Max F

Winter 1997-2006 45.09
Winter 2007-2016 43.76
Down 1.33F

Spring 1997-2006 64.48
Spring 2007-2016 64.80
Up 0.32F

Summer 1997-2006 85.02
Summer 2007-2016 85.38
Up 0.36F

Autumn 1997-2006 66.73
Autumn 2007-2016 67.27
Up 0.54F

Annuals 1997-2006 65.33
Annuals 2007-2016 65.30
Down 0.03F

Met Office temps (https://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/summaries/datasets) for the UK show …

Min C

Winter 1997-2006 1.43
Winter 2007-2016 1.17
Down 0.26C

Spring 1997-2006 4.27
Spring 2007-2016 4.01
Down 0.26C

Summer 1997-2006 10.55
Summer 2007-2016 10.32
Down 0.23C

Autumn 1997-2006 6.69
Autumn 2007-2016 6.49
Down 0.20C

Annuals 1997-2006 5.78
Annuals 2007-2016 5.51
Down 0.27C

Max C

Winter 1997-2006 7.09
Winter 2007-2016 6.91
Down 0.18C

Spring 1997-2006 12.15
Spring 2007-2016 12.27
Up 0.12C

Summer 1997-2006 18.96
Summer 2007-2016 18.62
Down 0.34C

Autumn 1997-2006 13.43
Autumn 2007-2016 13.26
Down 0.17C

Annuals 1997-2006 12.96
Annuals 2007-2016 12.80
Down 0.16C

Unlike NOAA, the Met Office has compiled its 2017 monthly, seasonal and annual averages so the decades can be shifted forward a year to see if it’s getting warmer or colder …

Min C

Winter 1998-2007 1.66
Winter 2008-2017 1.10
Down 0.56C

Spring 1998-2007 4.32
Spring 2008-2017 4.03
Down 0.29C

Summer 1998-2007 10.49
Summer 2008-2017 10.37
Down 0.12C

Autumn 1998-2007 6.69
Autumn 2008-2017 6.51
Down 0.18C

Annuals 1998-2007 5.79
Annuals 2008-2017 5.52
Down 0.27C

Max C

Winter 1998-2007 7.32
Winter 2008-2017 6.86
Down 0.46C

Spring 1998-2007 12.23
Spring 2008-2017 12.26
Up 0.03C

Summer 1998-2007 18.84
Summer 2008-2017 18.69
Down 0.15C

Autumn 1998-2007 13.44
Autumn 2008-2017 13.22
Down 0.22C

Annuals 1998-2007 12.98
Annuals 2008-2017 12.78
Down 0.20C

UK annual min trend static, max trend cooler. UK and US winters in particular getting colder.

Crispin in Waterloo
January 5, 2018 12:45 pm
January 5, 2018 5:28 pm

The pause is showing now that it never was a pause but an overturning.
We’ll now see the full extent of data manipulation that the Climagesterium are willing to carry out to keep the story alive. Oh babe – then it falls apart.

Rasa
January 6, 2018 10:57 am

Climate Science/Scientists, to be grammatically cor rest should be written as
“Climate Science” or
“Climate Scientists”
Just a convention to alert reader this is not real scientists/science