Beware the habitual El Niño hype – Net Zero Watch

Posted: July 13, 2023 by oldbrew in aerosols, alarmism, atmosphere, Critique, data, ENSO, media, Temperature, weather
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Not hard to imagine so-called climate reporters with fingers hovering over the alarm button, ready to press it as soon as the first hint of an El Niño is mentioned somewhere.
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The world is once again in the grip of a semi-regular climate alarm, says David Whitehouse @ Net Zero Watch.

I’m not referring to the latest onset of the El Niño cycle, declared in action on July 4th by the United Nations, but the amplified rhetoric about the pace and scale of warming temperatures that always accompanies such El Niño periods.

Do you remember what happened last time we had a record El Niño in 2015/16? Global temperatures increased rapidly – as they do during such an event – and, according to some, it was full speed ahead to a runaway thermal apocalypse … until global temperatures started to fall again.

Earlier this month, the world broke global temperature records for several days, inevitably leading to renewed speculation about the onset of runaway global warming. The Guardian asked if we have entered a more erratic and dangerous phase with the onset of an El Niño event on top of human-made global heating.

Well, not really, or at least not on the basis of the data we have so far.

The global temperature data which started these claims are of course preliminary and are in any case a mixture of real data and input from models so a note of caution is needed. Nonetheless it is expected that the temperature records will be confirmed in coming months.

The real situation is, as they say, a little more complicated than many of the exaggerated claims.

In recent months the atmospheric circulation over the North Atlantic has been unusual. The Azores High – a semi-permanent area of high pressure – was much weaker than normal. To put this into context, for the past decade the Azores High was about or above average at this time of year. This year’s variation resulted in low wind speeds occurring at the same time as a so-called marine heatwave in the north Atlantic.

The lower wind speeds lead to a reduction in the mixing of surface water with the cooler water below, allowing the sea surface temperatures to increase.

Another consequence is a reduction in the transport of dust from the Sahara westward over the north Atlantic. Usually Saharan dust reflects solar radiation back into space before it reaches the ocean surface, thereby cooling it.

Another contributing factor is the decreasing particulate pollution over the northern hemisphere as the air gets cleaner over Europe and North America.

Full article here.

Comments
  1. saighdear says:

    It’s BUCKETING rain here at mo. TalkTV with Ian Collins: JimDale V The Daily Sceptic.. Editor ChrisMorrison WTf ? ( as they say wotever that means ) and it was COLD last night again….. and where’s the wind today AGAIN ? gone with the herring ( Poor MR Heron) I’m off to pack Wool!

  2. ivan says:

    So their data is a mixture of real data and computer games – presumably 5% real data and 95% game play, which means there is nothing to get excited about.

  3. Graeme No.3 says:

    Apparently a rise in several stations in Antarctica, and as that is a big continent, extrapolating that to the whole makes the models look suitable for a scary story.
    If the claim was a “a few parts of Antarctic went up from minus 25℃ to minus 2℃” that might not have caused headlines.

  4. oldbrew says:

    Why Brits like Mediterranean holidays…

    UK weather: ‘Low chance’ of heatwave this summer, experts say
    As southern Europe sees temperatures of up to 45C (113F), the Met Office said there is no sign of the Cerberus heatwave arriving in the UK.

    Thursday 13 July 2023

    https://news.sky.com/story/uk-weather-low-chance-of-heatwave-this-summer-experts-say-12920472

    More like 17-21C in England today.
    – – –
    We have a prediction…

    What can the world expect from the developing El Niño?
    Posted on 11 July, 2023 by Met Office Press Office

    Jeff Knight is the Met Office’s manager of Climate Variability Modelling. He said: “A typical El Niño temporarily adds about 0.2C to average global temperature.

    “This increase is dwarfed by the 1.2C that we have seen from climate change since the Industrial Revolution but added to that human-induced warming a new global temperature record is likely before the end of next year.

    What can the world expect from the developing El Niño?

  5. saighdear says:

    Oldbrew:” Brits like Mediterranean holidays” … Hmm, does that include Scots? … only saying BECAUSE we are having such COLD Nights.. nobody is talking about that AT ALL! We had our ” summer ” 3 weeks ago, this is now more like autumnal weather: Squally showers and cold nights. Where’s the windpower when you need it? only around 3-3/4’rs GigaWatt production again today ( NOT even going to go down the propaganda / hype term of using PERCENTAGES ) and in SW Scotland they’re already replacing windmills to go bigger: Hmm Bigger Herons can see more non-fish in the pond, eh? So if we could afford to spend time at airports for the strikes to clear and go “abroad”, why would we be going to this too hot place called “the Med” or Dubai, etc. … just more double standards amongst the Faithfull ( the sheeple) when asked about temperatures ( They really have NO IDEA about temp: It’s either too hot or too cold or too wet… never the clothes !! )

  6. oldbrew says:

    The jetstream moved south, basically.

    Britain set to dodge scorching 40C as jet stream shift knocks Cerberus heatwave off course

    While Britain continues to face gloomy weather this summer, Italy is set to bake in a dangerous heatwave reaching a sweltering 48C as a jet stream pushes a high-pressure weather system southwards.
    Fri, Jul 14, 2023

    https://www.express.co.uk/news/weather/1790888/UK-weather-heatwave-Europe-Cerberus

  7. oldbrew says:

    Latest forecast…

    In fact, the temperature of the subsurface in June 2023 was the third-warmest June value in our record, which goes back to 1979. This warm subsurface will feed the surface for the next few months, helping to sustain El Niño conditions.

    How about potential strength? El Niño’s maximum Niño-3.4 Index values, aka its peak, almost always occur in November­–January. We estimate about an 80% chance that this El Niño will peak with a maximum Niño-3.4 Index of at least 1.0 °C, a 50% chance of at least 1.5 °C, and a 20% chance of above 2.0 °C. These thresholds are, respectively, how we categorize moderate, strong, and very strong El Niño events, but this is just an informal classification.

    https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/july-2023-el-ni%C3%B1o-update-learning-steps

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