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chubbs

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  1. Whenever there is a climate-related catastrophe, deniers have to develop a story-line to protect their followers worldview. The story only has to be credible to skeptics/deniers, a low bar. Martz and Mass, are missing the main climate drivers for this event, but that's OK, their followers don't know the drivers either, and they readily accept any excuse to deny. Of course climate change isn't the only factor or the "cause" for this event. People do risky/dumb things and are always going to do dumb things. The fact that people do risky things is another reason to avoid climate change, just makes the risky things worse. Denying climate change encourages risk taking. Not a good approach when climate impacts are ramping and our infrastructure is becoming increasingly unsuitable for the climate we have.
  2. Good news, getting a range of findings on the overturning circulation. Hopefully someone can find some consistency in the various studies.
  3. Yes, the Pacific is probably playing a role. Funny how things have flipped since the hiatus. Then the deck was stacked against warming due to: the Pacific, aerosols from China, the sun, volcanoes and possibly other factors. Now the factors that slowed warming have reversed. Not aware of anyone who anticipated the rate of warming we have seen in the past 10-15 years. Even nflwxman's excellent prognosis was too low. The rest of us weren't even close.
  4. 2025 is starting off warm, record warm in recent days. The closest years are 2016 and 2024. Very unusual for a La Nina winter month to be in record territory. Could be a first.
  5. I moved my family away two years ago because, as California’s climate kept growing drier, hotter and more fiery, I feared that our neighborhood would burn. But even I didn’t think fires of this scale and severity would raze it and other large areas of the city this soon. And yet images of Altadena this week show a hellscape, like a landscape out of Octavia Butler’s uncannily prescient climate novel “Parable of the Sower.” One lesson climate change teaches us again and again is that bad things can happen ahead of schedule. Model predictions for climate impacts have tended to be optimistically biased. But now, unfortunately, the heating is accelerating, outpacing scientists’ expectations. We must face the fact that no one is coming to save us, especially in disaster-prone places such as Los Angeles, where the risk of catastrophic wildfire has been clear for years. And so many of us face a real choice — to stay or to leave. I chose to leave. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/10/opinion/la-fires-los-angeles-wildfires.html?unlocked_article_code=1.oU4.uI8e.voMxKYiiN72M&smid=bs-share
  6. David Swain has a number posts which describe the role of climate change in the LA fire. He references a couple of additional papers: 1) Fire growth speed is increasing in the US; and, 2} A new paper on hydroclimate whiplash, either wet-to-dry or dry-to-wet cycling. As expected, hydroclimate whiplash is increasing around the world with climate change. Per graphic below, The LA fires are a good example. https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adk5737 https://www.nature.com/articles/s43017-024-00624-z
  7. Site below bundles sea ice information including charts and data. Chart below as an example. https://sites.google.com/view/arctic-sea-ice/home
  8. 2024 ended up 0.118C warmer than 2023 and 0.281C warmer than 2016. The gap with 2016 widened during the year.
  9. Yes, and we are warming rapidly. If maintain this warming pace, we will be warmer than any interglacial in a decade or two. Outside of the ice-age climate of the past 3 million years.
  10. Good luck figuring out why people are misinformed. Per this new dataset the board would have been hopping in 1800. https://x.com/ed_hawkins/status/1864815188488126839
  11. Last 12 months GISS temperatures vs 1881-1910. Warming is maximized over Northern Hemisphere land, which is more sensitive to climate change and natural variability. Not surprising that MWP and LIA appear more significant there. Since 1990 more information has been obtained for the rest of the world, reducing the climate importance of both eras. 1.5C warming on a global basis is very significant. Roughly 25% of an ice age swing from complete glaciation to warm interglacial. The earth hasn't been this warm since the last interglacial 120,000 years ago, and we continue to warm rapidly, roughly 20x faster than the last deglaciation. In a decade or two we will have to go back several million years.
  12. Could help explain the reduction in global albedo that is driving the recent surge in global temperatures, from last week's annual AGU meeting: The results indicate that changes in large-scale dynamical processes, primarily midlatitude storm shifts and ITCZ narrowing, produce contraction of the world’s storm-cloud zones and constitute the primary contributor to the recent increase in cloud radiative warming. https://agu.confex.com/agu/agu24/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/1730632 https://www.science.org/content/article/earth-s-clouds-are-shrinking-boosting-global-warming
  13. Off the chart and record-breaking melting on the surface of the Antarctic Ice Sheet. Not a big deal in the short-term as most of the melt is reabsorbed on the ice sheet. Not good in the long-term for critical ice sheet components if surface melt becomes more severe. https://www.climato.uliege.be/cms/c_5652669/fr/climato-antarctica
  14. You have to be careful using raw data from multiple station sites with different baseline temperatures; airport vs downtown for instance. Per NOAA, who corrects for site differences, the past 10 winters in Cook county (2015-2024) were 4.6F warmer than 1895-1930 and the last 5 years (2020-2024) 5.8F warmer. Independently, Madison,Wisconsin Lake freeze data going back to 1852 shows much shorter duration of ice cover now vs the 19'th century and the 1960s and 1970s don't stand out as cold decades. (Mendota and Monona Lakes below.) https://climatology.nelson.wisc.edu/first-order-station-climate-data/madison-climate/lake-ice/history-of-ice-freezing-and-thawing-on-lake-monona/
  15. ???? The Chicago airport winter temperature trend is similar to east coast airports (and Detroit). Per the trendline Chicago winters are 5-6F warmer than 60 years ago. Snowfall is more variable locally, but I don't see big differences between Chicago and the east coas teither: 2000+2010s were good, and recent 5-9 years bad. Like many colder east coast cities a snow downtrend hasn't clearly emerged in Chicago despite the warmer winters. That is as expected due to greater snow variability and competing temperature and moisture effects.
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