Coldsnap Doesn't Disprove Global Warming

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Beijing had its coldest morning in almost 40 years and its biggest snowfall since 1951. Britain is suffering through its longest cold snap since 1981. And freezing weather is gripping the Deep South, including Florida's orange groves and beaches.

Whatever happened to global warming?

Such weather doesn't seem to fit with warnings from scientists that the Earth is warming because of greenhouse gases. But experts say the cold snap doesn't disprove global warming at all — it's just a blip in the long-term heating trend.

"It's part of natural variability," said Gerald Meehl, a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. With global warming, he said, "we'll still have record cold temperatures. We'll just have fewer of them."

Deke Arndt of the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C., noted that 2009 will rank among the 10 warmest years for Earth since 1880.

Scientists say man-made climate change does have the potential to cause more frequent and more severe weather extremes, such as heat waves, storms, floods, droughts and even cold spells. But experts interviewed by The Associated Press did not connect the current frigid blast to climate change.

So what is going on?

"We basically have seen just a big outbreak of Arctic air" over populated areas of the Northern Hemisphere, Arndt said. "The Arctic air has really turned itself loose on us."

In the atmosphere, large rivers of air travel roughly west to east around the globe between the Arctic and the tropics. This air flow acts like a fence to keep Arctic air confined.

But recently, this air flow has become bent into a pronounced zigzag pattern, meandering north and south. If you live in a place where it brings air up from the south, you get warm weather. In fact, record highs were reported this week in Washington state and Alaska.

But in the eastern United States, like some other unlucky parts of the globe, Arctic air is swooping down from the north. And that's how you get a temperature of –16 C in Beijing, a reading of –41 C in mainland Norway, and 45 centimetres of snow in parts of Britain, where a member of parliament who said the snow "clearly indicates a cooling trend" was jeered by colleagues.

The zigzag pattern arises naturally from time to time, but it is not clear why it's so strong right now, said Michelle L'Heureux, a meteorologist at the Climate Prediction Centre of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The centre says the pattern should begin to weaken in a week or two.

Jeff Masters, director of meteorology for Weather Underground, a forecasting service, said he expects more typical winter weather across North America early next week.

That will be welcome news in the southern U.S., where farmers have been trying to salvage millions of dollars' worth of strawberries and other crops.

On Miami Beach, tourists bundled up in woolen winter coats and hooded sweatshirts Wednesday beneath a clear blue sky. Some brazenly let the water wash over their feet and a few even lay out in bikinis and swimming trunks. A brisk wind blew and temperatures hovered between 10 C and 15 C.

"Last year we were swimming every day," said Olivia Ruedinger of Hamburg, Germany. "I miss that."

http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2010/01/07/tech-climate-winter-weather.html

I knew that there would be people that took this as a chance to say global warming doesn't exist. It does exist, just not on as large of a scale as some people have proclaimed.

Anyway, I find it interesting to see how some countries that rarely get snow are coping with it. It's actually quite funny to see people freaking out over a couple inches of snow and being told not to go to work. :lol: We have three feet of snow, but then again, we're used to it and a lot more.
 
CBC News - Technology & Science - Cold snap doesn't disprove global warming: experts

I knew that there would be people that took this as a chance to say global warming doesn't exist. It does exist, just not on as large of a scale as some people have proclaimed.

Anyway, I find it interesting to see how some countries that rarely get snow are coping with it. It's actually quite funny to see people freaking out over a couple inches of snow and being told not to go to work. :lol: We have three feet of snow, but then again, we're used to it and a lot more.

Lol, where I live, we hardly ever get much snow but there's still snow from last month. We panic all the time when two inches of snow fall and we got 11 inches from the last snow!
 
Lol, where I live, we hardly ever get much snow but there's still snow from last month. We panic all the time when two inches of snow fall and we got 11 inches from the last snow!

Oh wow! People have been getting a fair bit of snow in places where snow doesn't always fall. How are YOU liking the snow?
 
Of course! Do you guys have a snow plow system set up?

Yes but it isn't very good. I live in hilly area if not quite among the foothills of the Blue Ridge mountains. If we get heavy snowfall, it can break the snow budget for the year.
 
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