Thanks, NewScientist, for Admitting Climate Change Isn’t Making the Jet Stream More Erratic

From ClimateREALISM

By Linnea Lueken

NewScientist, a publication dedicated to popularizing science, recently published a post titled “Extreme winter weather isn’t down to a wavier jet stream,” reporting on a new study that shows, the jet stream is not getting wavier in winter months due to climate change. This is true, and it has been evident for some time, but runs counter to assertions commonly made by climate alarmists.

NewScientist writes that “[i]ncreasingly erratic winter weather in the northern hemisphere isn’t a result of the polar jet stream getting more wavy, according to new research . . ..”

Although the vast bulk of the article is devoted to insisting that climate change is causing worsening winter and summer weather, claims regularly debunked at Climate Realism, the publication deserves some credit for reporting the study’s results concerning the jet stream, which was, in fact, the focus of the research itself.

The new reports findings are not actually that “new,” in the sense that Climate Realism has reported on research that came to the same conclusion several times in the past few years, herehere, and here, for instance. There is copious evidence showing that not only are cold snaps not uncommon, but that the jet stream’s (and more specifically, polar vortex) influence on extreme winter weather has been acknowledged since at least 1853. Years of studies looking at the frequency of and intensity of polar vortex events have found no consistent trends. As pointed out by my colleague Anthony Watts in this post on the subject, “a 2021 study in the journal Geophysical Research Letters found no statistically significant increase in jet stream waviness or meandering in recent decades,” and he explains there has never been a consensus among scientists when it comes to the issue of polar vortex/jet stream behavior.

The post at NewScientist goes on to explain the new study, saying “recent erratic behaviour isn’t out of the ordinary,” and that the jet stream has been both wavier and less wavy than it is today.

Unfortunately, that is where the NewScientist and the authors of the paper it was discussing ceased to follow the evidence. One of the study’s authors reassured NewScientist that climate change is still “affecting extreme weather events in all sorts of really important ways,” and that the jet stream is actually becoming wavier in the summertime, “where it is getting slower, with bigger waves, which leads to things like big heatwaves, drought, and wildfires.”

This would be compelling if existing data backed up the claim, but, in fact, big heatwaves, drought, and wildfires have not become more frequent or severe in recent decades. Heatwaves were much more severe in the earlier decades of the 20th century, and overall drought has been declining while precipitation increases. Now that it is summer, many outlets are attempting to claim that hot weather is driven by climate change. In doing so they almost always ignore where heat records are being set, as it is often at airports and other heat-absorbing locations, and ignore historical records that show hot summers are not unprecedented.

Similarly, data shows that wildfires were worse in the past with research from NASA and the European Space Agency showing that acreage lost to wildfires has declined markedly over the past few decades.

The NewScientist, and the AGU study it references, should have quit when they were ahead. They should have published their unalarming findings about climate change’s lack of an impact on the winter jet stream without then assuring people that despite their study’s findings, they really are true believers and climate change is making weather worse. The latter point is refuted by real world data.

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Richard M
July 1, 2025 2:20 pm

I’ve seen claims that it is the jet stream changes which led to a reduction in clouds (the real cause of our warming). However, a wavier jet stream should produce more clouds, not less. Backwards as usual.

Speaking of clouds, they must be increasing again. Look at the CFSR data.

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It appears all the warming that occurred after the Hunga-Tonga eruption has now faded away. Going to be interesting to see all the excuses from the climate cult.

Rud Istvan
July 1, 2025 2:20 pm

‘wavier jet stream’. The scientific terms for this jet stream characteristic are a zonal jet stream (less wavy) and a meridional jet stream (more wavy).

For decades, modern long distance jet transportation has taken zonal/meridional into account in considering fuel loads and transit times, since they usually cruise at jet stream altitudes. So this ‘new study’ is actually just decades old information.

From much personal experience, jet stream variations can make up to an hour transit difference crossing the US or the Atlantic. Have flown easterly at slightly supersonic ground speeds many times in ordinary commercial jets with a jet stream tailwind.

’New Scientist’ piling on climate summer alarm despite the new study’s winter observational lack of evidence just proves what ‘new science’ actually is. Neither new nor science.

Scissor
Reply to  Rud Istvan
July 1, 2025 2:32 pm

No tailwind needed, Al Gore goes everywhere fast via hyperbolic craft.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Scissor
July 1, 2025 10:21 pm

Or more burritos.

MrGrimNasty
July 1, 2025 2:27 pm

Crazy story tip.

‘Scientists want to use giant PARACHUTES to stop the Gulf Stream collapsing – in controversial geoengineering experiment to combat global warming.’

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-14864605/Scientists-use-PARACHUTES-Gulf-Stream.html

Reply to  MrGrimNasty
July 1, 2025 3:46 pm

Potentially less crazy story tip:

I know aol and USA today are a load of bollox on climate, but is this true:

https://www.aol.com/noaa-budget-spells-plans-reduce-170320888.html

If it is true, could someone help me with who to write to that might read my opposition to this. I look at daily updates from Charctic Sea Ice every day and Mauno Loa CO2 is invaluable.

I realize Julienne Stroeve and Walt Meier don’t have the big picture right in their heads, but we need them to provide the data.

Scissor
Reply to  philincalifornia
July 1, 2025 6:56 pm

It’s at least partially true but there is a lot of opposition. To me a 50% cut sounds about right.

Bob
July 1, 2025 3:29 pm

Very nice Linnea.

July 2, 2025 2:02 am

NewScientist, a publication dedicated to popularizing science

You spelled ‘propagandarising’ wrong

Reply to  Zig Zag Wanderer
July 2, 2025 6:16 am

Good one! So true!

Sparta Nova 4
July 3, 2025 9:05 am

So now the Climate Syndicate has invented a new term, “wavering.” Sheesh.