New Video: If There’s Global Warming, Why is It So Cold?

January 29, 2014

I did one of these years ago, during the “Snowmageddon” events of 2009, and have been meaning to update. The current situation lends itself perfectly.

I continued the tradition of interviewing Jeff Masters at Dunham Lake, near his pastoral southeastern Michigan home, and by serendipity, caught up with Jennifer Francis at the nearby  University of Michigan School of Atmospheric, Oceanic, and Space Sciences. for a quick update/interview.

Update:

Case in Point.

Advertisement

30 Responses to “New Video: If There’s Global Warming, Why is It So Cold?”


  1. Several parts of northern Norway has also had an unusually dry period and combined with high winds it was a recipie for disaster. Two fires, one in a city took out several houses and then a bush fire taking out a lot of houses in Flatanger these past days. Today there is another one at Frøya just developing. Ofc nothing like the huge recent fires in California, but still a reminder that the changes in weather pattern and stuck systems due to the meandering of the jetstream creates perfect conditions for all kinds of new problems.

  2. MorinMoss Says:

    Is all that warm air in the North going to have a significant impact on ice melt in the Arctic or Greenland or is it still too early in the season?

  3. vierotchka Says:

    Thanks for this – posted it on my facebook page because it will answer the questions of a number of my friends.


  4. […] I did one of these years ago, during the "Snowmageddon" events of 2009, and have been meaning to update. The current situation lends itself perfectly. I continued the tradition of interviewing Jeff Masters at Dunham Lake, near his pastoral southeastern Michigan home, and by serendipity, caught up with Jennifer Francis at the nearby University of Michigan School of Atmospheric, Oceanic, and Space Sciences. for a quick update/interview.  […]

  5. rayduray Says:

    Hi Peter,

    Outstanding video. This is one of your best editing extravaganzas ever. Kudos!

    ***
    OFF TOPIC

    Re: Pacific Northwest wind power development put on hold

    http://tinyurl.com/k5mj85t

    The gist of this article appears to be that there’s been a bit of a slowdown of PNW wind power development as California shifts policy toward more in-state generation.

    • rayduray Says:

      Further Off Topic….

      A humor break courtesy of Andy Borowitz, Michelle Bachmann and The Black Hole Brouhaha…

      http://tinyurl.com/p76zcgo

      There is a “climate change” hook. Look for it. 🙂

      • dumboldguy Says:

        Excellent Borowitz, but the sad thing is that it does sound exactly like what Bachmann might say. The proof of that will be if it soon appears on some of the wing-nut sites as evidence that “Ol’ Michelle the Wing-Nut” hasn’t lost her touch, and still knows how to speak the truth.

        (And my all time favorite is her speaking about being “so glad to be visiting the state where the shot heard round the world was fired”—to a crowd in New Hampshire).


    • There is all kinds of nuttiness going on in energy. Natural gas prices spike in cold extremes as pipelines reach max capacity. The same natural gas prices are spiking due to peak electric demand. We have a capacity glut and peak demand at the same time. Go figure. So we have underutilization of base load,(too much large thermal PP) and not enough peaking. Sometimes the best choices are not made relative to CO2. US is not a single interconnected grid. Interconnection could be better. .


  6. My heart goes out to all those suffering in the freeze.
    http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/29/us/winter-weather/
    Meanwhile, Alaska is melting in record warmth, and the Pacific states are warm and no rain. Drought will likely have its impacts. Earlier, Pacific states had freeze. Extreme weather.

    • rayduray Says:

      Hi Christopher,

      I’m in Bend, OR, near the center of the state. We’ve been getting a bit of moisture over the past three days. And the forecast is for the high pressure system over the Pacific to slide to the northwest over the next couple of weeks, bringing much needed precipitation to the region. We had our cold weather in early December. -22 F. was kinda brisk. 🙂


      • Send some warm weather to the East and some rain to California. Lost in the shuffle is that 11 Western States are in drought conditions. British Columbia is not currently, but has faced recent drought in past years.
        http://www.usatoday.com/story/weather/2014/01/16/drought-west-disaster-declarations/4522651/
        This is why I said, its almost impossible for any one person to contemplate global warming and its effects. Not even as an astronaut. However, if like on this page, we can get together and explain to each other the vast array of conditions across both hemispheres, we can get an idea of the human dimensions. I enjoy your posts, and the brilliant links.

  7. rayduray Says:

    A Year of Weather – 2013 is a mesmerizing look at our Blue Marble.

  8. Cy Halothrin Says:

    Can’t remember if I’ve mentioned it before or not (on this blog), but I live in Taiwan and we’re having the warmest and driest winter in memory. I’m sure enjoying the nice weather, but the farmers aren’t too happy as their wells dry up.

    By the way, Happy Chinese New Year (it’s New Year’s Eve now). It’s a rather big deal around here.


  9. […] Peter Sinclair and the Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media have put together an amazing video that succinctly explains how the eastern half of the United States can be so cold in the midst of global warming and climate change. Among those he interviews are Jeff Masters of the Weather Underground and Jennifer Francis, who is research professor at Rutgers University’s Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences. It also includes graphics and excerpts from news reports. It’s brief and brilliant. […]


  10. […] at 12:02 on January 30, 2014 by rss@dailykos.com Laurence Lewis Peter Sinclair and the Yale Forum on Climate Change and the Media have put together an amazing video that […]


Leave a Reply

Please log in using one of these methods to post your comment:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: