When considering long term climate trends, you need to filter out short
term weather anomalies like El Nino or volcanic eruptions - an easy way is to plot a 5 year average.
When considering long term climate trends, you need to filter out short
term weather anomalies like El Nino or volcanic eruptions - an easy way is to plot a 5 year average.
Not exact matches
Pilot study focusing on a region vulnerable to climate change Although the study highlights that long
term changes in rainfall intensity are not always» man - made,» it does not necessarily mean that today's
weather anomalies across the Indian Ocean rim countries and, in particular, their frequency, are not subject to human influence.
«If you can eat or wear it, invest in it»... Long
term 3 factors might drive food prices up instead: 1) Global warming and
weather anomalies; 2) 9 billion people in the planet by 2050 (and then more); 3) Increasing role of biomasses in the renewable energy sector.
http://www.woodfortrees.org/plot/gistemp/from:2013 Even if there are long -
term large - scale ongoing
anomalies in the ocean or soil, I think the
weather variation would be larger than such a signal, and that is essentially a large random perturbation.
Though the ongoing climate engineering insanity can and does create short
term highly toxic cool - doens, these
weather anomalies come at the cost of an even worse overall planetary meltdown.
In climate science, 30 years is the accepted trend period, partly I think for historical reasons, but the length of time also makes allowance for
anomalies arising from short -
term fluctuations in
weather and other events such as volcanoes.