What amuses me, not quite the right word, is how the Right seems to  enjoy
making a major issue out of climate, more than does the Left. 
 
Each side, Right and Left, is the same, however, in selective use of  data,
blatant cherry picking. For both, this is also ideological, not  empirical,
even if there is a veneer of science each side employs.
 
Personally the one metric that has meaning to me are glaciers since
they combine so many factors into one phenomenon, rainfall /  snowfall,
temperature, effects or non-effects of greenhouse gasses,  and so  forth.
And worldwide the glaciers, or 90%+ of them, are in serious retreat.
 
Where does all that water go?  Ultimately into the sea. 
 
What I do know is that less salinity in the sea and the colder the sea  
gets.
My guess  -this is non-professional speculation-  is that maybe  we have
reached a tipping point, hence the current winter blast.
 
In any case, whatever is going on won't be clear for several years
in all likelihood. Let's see what the glaciers do by 2015. That could
tell us if there has been any change in long range trends.
 
In the meantime approximately 50 other issues are more important.
 
Billy
 
=========================
 
CS Monitor
 
How frigid 'polar vortex' could be result of  global warming (+video)
The polar vortex putting the US in a deep freeze could represent how global 
 warming is changing dynamics in the Arctic, researchers say. The current 
cold  snap won't last long, though.
By _Pete  Spotts_ (http://www.csmonitor.com/About/Staff/Pete-Spotts) , 
Staff writer / January  6, 2014 
 
A bitter Arctic blast spanning the central and eastern US has propelled the 
 phrase "polar vortex" from the pages of dense scientific papers to 
headline  status as frigid temperatures and strong winds close schools and 
businesses and  prompt forecasters to warn of "historic and life-threatening"  
conditions.
 
In essence, a buildup of Arctic air, its chill deepened by 24 hours of  
darkness during winter, has breached its meteorological fence to pour deep into 
 North America. 
Such outbreaks often involve tendrils of cold air that can leak through the 
 fence. This event, however, involves a large expanse of chilled air 
cleaved from  an initial mass of cold air that can range from 600 to 1,200 
miles 
across. 
Paradoxically, the event may be a harbinger of winter  outbreaks to come in 
the northern hemisphere as Earth's climate warms, some  researchers say – a 
result of shrinking Arctic Ocean summer sea ice and the  projected changes 
in wind and snowfall patterns triggered by the ocean's warmth  and moisture.
It's been dubbed the warm-Arctic, cold-continent effect – one that doesn't  
show up well in seasonal forecast models but does appear in the real world, 
says  Judah Cohen, director of seasonal forecasting at Atmospheric and 
Environmental  Research (AER), a weather-risk management company based in 
Lexington, Mass.  Climate models operating on longer time scales may be 
missing the effect as well, he adds.  
At the heart of the issue is the polar vortex, a mass of cold air in the  
stratosphere that circulates counterclockwise over the Arctic and has a  
clockwise counterpart over Antarctica. 
Deprived of sunlight during the winter, these vortices spin up, drawing  
energy from the temperature difference between the warmer air at mid-latitudes 
 and polar air. The winds along the boundary form the polar jet stream. The 
 sharper the temperature contrast, the stronger the jet stream and the 
better job  it does keeping the cold air largely corralled at high latitudes. 
But the jet stream doesn't flow in a nice, tight circle around the Arctic.  
Its interaction with different air masses and topography as it travels over 
 oceans and continents forces the stream to meander north and south, as 
well as  up and down by elevation. 
Instabilities in the flow can allow the cold air to briefly migrate to 
lower  latitudes. The vertical movement by elevation can allow weather systems 
from the  lower atmosphere to drive a wedge into the vortex from below. Cold 
air in the  gap between the two sections sinks and warms in events known as 
sudden  stratospheric warming. Such events can cleave the entire vortex in 
two and allow  a much larger mass of cold air to reach southward, according 
to atmospheric  researchers Darren Waugh, at The Johns Hopkins University in 
Baltimore and  Lorenzo Polvani of Columbia University in New York. 
The flow has been relatively weak on average during the past six weeks or  
more. The current outbreak began with a warming event and with a weaker flow 
to  hold back the cold, forecasters say. 
The outbreak is likely to be short-lived. Dr. Cohen notes that an 
atmospheric  blocking pattern over the eastern north Pacific has prevented 
warm,  
moisture-laden ocean air from moving east onto the continent. 
"There's a pretty dramatic warmup coming," he says. 
As for the future, he and other researchers have noted that such intense,  
short-term, regional chill-downs may occur more frequently as the climate 
warms  the Arctic. 
The change has been most obvious in the long-term decline of Arctic summer  
sea ice during the past 30 years. As the summer ice thins and shrinks in  
expanse, more ocean is exposed to longer hours of sunlight and absorbs heat 
that  otherwise would have been reflected back to space. In the fall, heat 
and  moisture return to the atmosphere with the moisture forming snow. 
Working with seasonal forecast models, Cohen says he noticed that for the  
past four or five winters, preseason winter-temperature forecasts have been 
much  too warm compared with the temperatures winter delivered. 
In an initial experiment, Cohen and colleagues at AER and at Harvard  
University devised a statistical model for "forecasting" the winter of 2012-13 
–  
marked by a warm Arctic and continents colder than official forecasts  
anticipated. The statistical model keyed off of fall snow cover in Eurasia as  
well as Arctic sea-ice extent in the fall. 
Last September, the team reported that the statistical model yielded a warm 
 Arctic, cold continent distribution of winter temperatures, while the 
official  seasonal forecast models did not. 
In the current forecast models, "you have a warm Arctic and warm 
continents.  That warming over the Arctic kind of smears out across the 
continents as  
well." 
In the real world, he adds, the relatively warm winter temperatures are  
confined to the Arctic. 
"More work needs to be done," he acknowledges, but adds that the results  
suggested that season-forecast models and perhaps even long-term climate 
models  are missing a distribution of wintertime temperatures important to 
forecasting  regional climate on seasonal or longer time  scales.

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