Records Continue To Fall In U.S.; La Niña Update; European Winter Forecast Calls For Arctic Finish; Southern SSW; + New Study: IPCC’s Models “Significantly Overestimate” Sea Level Rise
Records Continue To Fall In U.S.; La Niña Update; European Winter Forecast Calls For Arctic Finish; Southern SSW; + New Study: IPCC’s Models “Significantly Overestimate” Sea Level Rise
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10 Thoughts to “Records Continue To Fall In U.S.; La Niña Update; European Winter Forecast Calls For Arctic Finish; Southern SSW; + New Study: IPCC’s Models “Significantly Overestimate” Sea Level Rise”
Thanks for the great work Cap. You could save yourself some time and ignore any long term winter forecasts. They are as poor as the IPCC climate models.
What EXACTLY does “Already a qualifying Patreon member? Refresh to access this content.” mean? I keep trying to “Refresh” only I don’t know exactly WHAT I have to refresh.
In one week, temperatures have dropped by more than 1 degree Celsius in the subpolar North Atlantic.
How can sea surface temperatures fall so quickly?
Perhaps clouds blocking sunlight from reaching the sea surface? https://climatereanalyzer.org/clim/sst_daily/?dm_id=natlsp
Is the unusually cold Atlantic Ocean the reason why there have been no hurricanes this year?
Where has the heat energy in the Atlantic Ocean gone?:
As we move through what is typically the most active part of hurricane season, the Atlantic is experiencing an unexpected and unusually quiet spell.
Currently, there are no active storms anywhere in the Atlantic Basin. Even more surprising, there are no areas under watch for potential development over the next seven days. For early September, this is highly unusual. https://fox23maine.com/news/local/unusually-quiet-in-the-atlantic-as-we-mark-the-peak-of-hurricane-season
Deb, It’s the heat capacity of water that make his statement so surprising. The “Subpolar North Atlantic”, i.e. seawater, does not lose heat as easily as Missous’ air mass with a fresh front from Canada. Probably by a humungous factor.
Not cold Missouri. Climbing back into the 90’s from the 80’s. You’re going to have to put a permanent hitch in your graph for us!
Dirk would have something to say about this!
Thanks for the great work Cap. You could save yourself some time and ignore any long term winter forecasts. They are as poor as the IPCC climate models.
Not when they match past conditions…Geb stay Warm cuz it may not las long.
You been suckin’ up that KY white lightnin’ , Waygone?
What EXACTLY does “Already a qualifying Patreon member? Refresh to access this content.” mean? I keep trying to “Refresh” only I don’t know exactly WHAT I have to refresh.
Steven Blue
In one week, temperatures have dropped by more than 1 degree Celsius in the subpolar North Atlantic.
How can sea surface temperatures fall so quickly?
Perhaps clouds blocking sunlight from reaching the sea surface?
https://climatereanalyzer.org/clim/sst_daily/?dm_id=natlsp
Spinky-
I’ve known temps to drop 40F in 12 hours here with a storm front. Why are you crying over one degree, for Pete’s sake!
Is the unusually cold Atlantic Ocean the reason why there have been no hurricanes this year?
Where has the heat energy in the Atlantic Ocean gone?:
As we move through what is typically the most active part of hurricane season, the Atlantic is experiencing an unexpected and unusually quiet spell.
Currently, there are no active storms anywhere in the Atlantic Basin. Even more surprising, there are no areas under watch for potential development over the next seven days. For early September, this is highly unusual.
https://fox23maine.com/news/local/unusually-quiet-in-the-atlantic-as-we-mark-the-peak-of-hurricane-season
Deb, It’s the heat capacity of water that make his statement so surprising. The “Subpolar North Atlantic”, i.e. seawater, does not lose heat as easily as Missous’ air mass with a fresh front from Canada. Probably by a humungous factor.
Well, we’re not losing heat right now either.
But thx for the info. At least you can spell Deb right.