Believe
It: Global Warming Can Produce More Intense Snows
Still, that's more than enough to refute conservatives who engage in snow trolling
21
January, 2014
We
all remember "Snowmageddon" in February of 2010. Even as
Washington, D.C., saw 32 inches of snowfall for the month of
February—more than it has seen in any
February since 1899—conservatives
decided to use the weather to mock global warming. Oklahoma Senator
James Inhofe and his family even
built an igloo on
Capitol Hill and called it "Al Gore's New Home." Har har.
Yet
at the same time, scientific voices were pointing
out something
seemingly counterintuitive, but in fact fairly simple to understand:
Even as it raises temperatures on average, global warming may also
lead to more intense individual snow events. It's a lesson to keep in
mind as the northeast braces for winter storm Janus—which is
expected to deliver as much as a foot of snow in some regions—and
we can expect conservatives to once again mock climate change.
To
understand the relationship between climate change and intense
snowfall, you first need to understand that global warming certainly
doesn't do away with winter or the seasons. So it'll still be plenty
cold enough for snow much of the time. Meanwhile, global warming
loads the dice in favor of more intense precipitation through changes
in atmospheric moisture content. "Warming things up means the
atmosphere can and does hold more moisture," explains Kevin
Trenberth, a climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric
Research in Boulder, Colo. "So in winter, when there is still
plenty of cold air there's a risk of bigger snows. With east coast
storms, where the moisture comes from the ocean which is now warmer,
this also applies."
Why
does the atmosphere hold more moisture? The answer is a key physical
principle called the Clausius-Clapeyron equation, stating that as
atmospheric temperature rises, there is an exponential increase in
the amount of water vapor that the air can hold—leading
to more potential precipitation of all types.
(A detailed scientific explanation can be found here.)
Indeed,
scientific reports have often noted the snow-climate relationship. An
expansive 2006 study of
US snowstorms during the entirety of the 20th century, for instance,
found that they were more common in wetter and warmer years. "A
future with wetter and warmer winters...will bring more snowstorms
than in 1901-2000," the paper predicted. There is also a clear
increase in precipitation in the most intense precipitation events,
especially in the northeast:
Percent
increases in the amount of precipitation occurring in the heaviest
precipitation events from 1958 to 2007. US
Global Change Research Program.
"More
winter and spring precipitation is projected for the northern U.S.,
and less for the Southwest, over this century," adds the draft
US National Climate Assessment.
Precipitation of all kinds is expected to increase, the study notes,
but there will be large regional variations in how this is felt.
"The
old adage, 'it's too cold to snow,' has some truth to it,"
observes meteorologist Jeff Masters, co-founder of the Weather
Underground. "The heaviest snows tend to occur when the air
temperature is near the freezing mark, since the amount of water
vapor in the air increases as the temperature increases. If the
climate in a region where it is 'too cold to snow' warms to a level
where more snowstorms occur near the freezing point, an increase in
the number of heavy snowstorms is possible for that region."
In
fairness, global warming is also expected to decrease overall snow
cover, because intense snow events notwithstanding, snow won't last
on the ground as long in a warmer world. In fact, a decrease in snow
cover is already
happening.
Today's
snows will usher in a new northeast cold spell, not as intense as the
"polar vortex" onslaught of two weeks ago but still pretty
severe. But a temporary burst of cold temperatures doesn't refute
climate change any more than a major snowstorm does. Indeed, we have
reasons to expect that the rapid warming of the Arctic may be
producing more cold weather in the mid-latitudes in the Northern
hemisphere. For an explanation of why, listen to our interview with
meteorologist Eric
Holthaus on
a recent installment of Inquiring Minds (from minutes 2 through 12
below):
None of this is to say, of course, that global warming explains single events; its effect is present in overall changes in moisture content, and perhaps, in the large-scale atmospheric patterns that bring us our weather.
Still, that's more than enough to refute conservatives who engage in snow trolling
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