Mean Old Man Winter steps down from the North early: Will he stick around?
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| ATLANTA
Scientists and skeptics continue to quibble over global warming, but meanwhile Americans and Europeans are bracing for what could be a mean ol鈥 winter, given early signs 鈥 including 1,000 low temp records set in the US over Thanksgiving break 鈥 that Winter 2014 could be a real teeth-chatterer.
The trend has been most noticeable here in the South, where an already below-average summer 鈥 including a stretch of record low max temperatures in the Deep South in late July and August 鈥 has given way to snow in Texas, ice in Atlanta, and mittens in Jacksonville, Fla.
Americans aren鈥檛 alone in wondering about what鈥檚 ahead, given that record lows have largely kept pace with record highs this year. Across the pond, British tabloids, citing a government report, warned Saturday of a 鈥渢hree-month killer freeze鈥 in a series of headlines that the Met climate office quickly criticized as hyperbolic.
True, Seattle saw a record high this week, but most of the rest of the country huffed, puffed, and shivered through Thanksgiving, Gray Thursday and Black Friday, reasserting predictions from several quarters that the coming winter, still three weeks away, could be a doozy.
(More immediately the weekend will warm up in many parts of the country, thanks to a bit of cloud cover and moisture being pulled in behind the big cold front, but another cold, clear Arctic blast is expected to drape across the land late next week.)
Not all weather forecasters are in agreement that a particularly bitter winter is looming, however. Some, including the National Weather Service鈥檚 Climate Prediction Center, suggested last month that early winter record colds will give way to warmer-than-normal temperatures especially across the southern half of the country starting in January and into the spring.
But the good folks at the prediction center reeled back some of that earlier prognosis this week, suggesting that 鈥渢his year鈥檚 outlook has proven to be quite challenging 鈥 We鈥檙e not seeing strong climate signals and patterns that often give us clues as to what the season will bring.鈥
The new report also addresses the global warming implications, noting that, 鈥淲hile you might expect trends to always be up in a warming climate, the reality is that temperature trends are often different for different regions during different seasons.鈥
Finally, that 鈥渁tmospheric patterns can change from week to week and have the potential to deliver cold, snowy weather throughout the season.鈥
The Old Farmer鈥檚 Almanac hasn鈥檛 been so wishy-washy, noting colloquially that 鈥済lobal warming will soon be taking a vacation.鈥
鈥淭his winter is shaping up to be a rough one,鈥 Janice Stillman, editor of The Old Farmer鈥檚 Almanac, says on the almanac鈥檚 website. 鈥淪weaters and snow shovels should be unpacked early and kept close by throughout the season. The good news is that the extra precipitation鈥攚hich will fall as rain or snow depending where you are鈥攚ill help with any drought issues left over from the summer.鈥
More broadly, the National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration reports that global mean temperatures were up slightly this year (across the globe, August 2013 tied August 2003 for the sixth-warmest on record). But a UN report earlier this year acknowledged that air temperatures bucked predictions by pretty much flattening after record-hot 1998 even as carbon emissions, which are mostly blamed for warming, continued to rise thanks largely to growing Asian economies.
Some scientists have blamed the surprising non-rise in temperatures over the past decade on a 鈥渧ery plausible scenario鈥 where all that extra heat is being stored a half mile below the surface of the Pacific, from where it could suddenly be released.
NOAA reported last week that at least 鈥渟ea surface temperatures across the central Pacific have not been consistently warm or cool since Spring 2012, and we expect this to continue at least through next spring.鈥
Others suggest the connection between the cold weather and broader climate trends may be more substantial and direct, especially given that the US saw one of the slowest hurricane years on record, with a mere 13 tropical storms, and two Atlantic hurricanes, neither of them major.
鈥淕lobal warming caused the very cool US summer, and the very cold US winter,鈥 writes warming skeptic and blogger Stephen Goddard, presumably with his tongue in his cheek. 鈥淚t makes everything more extreme.鈥
All we know out here in the heartland is that it feels awful cold for this time of year. And it is.
This past week, the US recorded 969 low max temps, 203 record lows, and 205 record snowfalls (many in north Texas), according to reports from HAMweather, a conglomeration of personal weather stations. There were 17 record highs reported in the same time period.