Our
New Climate and Weather
by
Paul Beckwith
18
January, 2014
The
familiar global weather patterns that we, our parents, and our
grandparents (and most of our distant ancestors, at least as far back
as the last ice age remnants) have always experienced are no more. We
have entered an abrupt climate change phase in which an energized
water primed atmosphere and disrupted circulation patterns give rise
to unfamiliar, massive and powerfully destructive storms, torrential
rains, widespread heat waves and droughts, and less commonly but
occasionally widespread cold spells.
Why
is this happening now? Sophisticated Earth System computer Models
(ESMs), summaries of state-of-the-art peer reviewed climate science
(Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change IPCC), and mainstream
science have generally put the climate change threat out to the
latter part of the century. Global data from all parts of the world,
but most noticeably the Arctic shows that reality is quite different
from these models and mainstream thinking.
Just
by looking out the window much of humanity now senses that something
is very different, and uncomfortably wrong in their particular
region.
Depending
on location, vegetation is drying out and burning, or being toppled
by very high wind events, or oceans are invading upon coastlines, or
rivers are overrunning banks or drying up or both, while rainfall
deluges are inundating other regions. In fact some regions are
vacillating between massive floods and massive droughts, or record
high temperatures and record low temperatures, even on a weekly
basis.
As
crazy as things are now, clearly they are not bad enough to wake up
the general population enough to vote down denier politicians and
demand extensive governmental action on the problem. Not to worry,
that action is a sure bet in the near future, the only question is
will it happen next year, or in 3 years?
In
the meantime, many of us are doing as much as we can to educate
people on the dangers we face and speed up the understanding of
climate reality process. As much as we do, ultimately it is the
hammer of extreme weather, causing, for example global crop failures
or taking out a few more cities in rich countries that will take the
final credit for an abrupt tipping point in human behavior.
The
key to the disruption in the climate system is the Arctic.
Human
emissions have inexorably increased levels of carbon dioxide and
methane (Greenhouse gases GHGs) in the atmosphere sufficiently to
cause an incremental overall increase of global mean surface
temperature by 0.8 degrees C over the last century. Over the last 3
decades, the GHGs have caused sufficient warming in the Arctic to
melt enough land-covered snow and ocean covered ice such that the
highly reflective surfaces have been replaced by dark underlying land
and ocean greatly increasing sunlight absorption causing Arctic
temperature amplification of 3x to 5x and higher.
This
has melted permafrost on the land and on the shallow continental
shelves and has increased Arctic methane emissions, which on a
molecule-to-molecule basis cause warming >150x compared to carbon
dioxide on a short timescale. Arctic temperature amplification has
reduced the equator-to-Arctic temperature difference, which is
responsible for setting up global circulation patterns on the
rotating Earth. Thus, the high speed jet stream winds which
circumvent the globe become slower, and wavier, and weather patterns
change.
Extreme
weather events become stronger, more frequent, of longer duration,
and act on new regions. In effect, the climate background has
changed, so the statistics of all weather events changes. When the
ocean tide comes in all boats rise, when the climate system changes
all weather events change.
So
how does the North American freeze of early January, 2014 and the
upcoming late January, 2014 freeze fit into this picture? In our
familiar climate, the polar jet stream flowed mostly west to east
(with small north-south deviations or waves, with typically 4 to 7
crests and troughs around the globe) separating cold dry Arctic air
from lower latitude warmer moist air. The latitude of the jet moves
southward in our winter and northward in our summer.
In
our present climate the jet stream waviness has greatly increased and
eastward average speed has decreased. Not only that, but in early
January there were only two troughs (over North America and central
Asia) and two crests (over Europe and the Pacific up through Alaska
and the Bering Strait).
The
troughs had temperatures 20 degrees C cooler than normal, while the
crests had temperatures 20 degrees C warmer than normal. These large
waves and slowing of the jet stream is directly responsible for the
changes we have been experiencing in weather extremes. Cold or warm,
depending on your location.
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