You are not connected. Please login or register

View previous topic View next topic Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

1yes it cold.No Empty yes it cold.No Sun Dec 06, 2009 11:49 am

gypsy

gypsy
Moderator
MY words>>>
My remembering, usually by this time of year 20/30 years go it was already a deep freeze here in Kentucky an lots of snow.. we just had our first major killing freeze the third of november/plus summers are milder now than they have ever been that has been
happening since 1993 ??


http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/weather-climate-47010902
1.9.2009 9:37 AM

Yes, It's Cold. No, That Doesn't Mean Global Warming Is Bogus
12 are dead in a European cold snap, and icy wind is freezing much of the U.S. ... But it's still getting warmer, overall.




* Bush Administration Links Extreme Weather to Global Warming

By Dan Shapley


Buzz up!

In Europe, at least 12 people have died in a cold snap that coincided with Russia tightening the spigot on the natural gas lines that help keep much of Europe warm through the winter.

Across the northern portion of the United States, Arctic cold and high winds are creating sub-zero wind chill readings in several Midwestern and Northeastern states. What may be the biggest storm of the season to hit the Philadelphia-New York City area is on the way this weekend.

Snow. Cold. Wind chill. Does this mean global warming's over?

Not a chance. Just as no single drought, wildfire, flood or heat wave is caused by global warming, no single cold snap is an indication of anything other than natural weather fluctuation. The reason we pay more heed to the incidence of droughts, wildfires, floods, strong storms, heat waves and the like is that those weather phenomena are likely to become more frequent and/or intense due to global warming.

Neither record high, nor record low, temperatures -- in and of themselves -- mean anything to our understanding of climate. It's the long term trend that matters, and that long term trend is clear: It's getting warmer, significantly warmer, and faster than expected.

As the Secretary-General of WMO, Michel Jarraud, told journalists this week: "If we look at the trajectory over the last 160 years, it overlays a large natural variability, and that's what causes confusion."

A bulwark against global warming naysayers: The U.K. Met Office has predicted that 2009 will be among the five warmest years ever recorded. 2008 was in the Top 10, and nearly all the hottest years on record -- hottest, on average, across the globe that is -- have occurred since 1998. The rise in global temperature in those years is striking even when considered against thousands, or even millions, of years of fluctuations in the weather.

View previous topic View next topic Back to top  Message [Page 1 of 1]

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum