Simply stated, the differential impact from the gargantuan, modern CO2 emissions on global 5 -
year average warming should be significantly greater than pre-modern, natural warming for 5 - year averages.
Yep, no matter how one slices and dices the 5 -
year average warming amounts, the modern era's warming represents an increase not even one - tenth of a degree greater than the pre-1950 warming — it is not only a statistically worthless difference, it is completely climate insignificant.
Chart # 3 compares the 5 -
year average warming for each period, using the same starting anomaly point.
40:30 Ice core records, low - latitudes, like hockey stick 42:00 Glacier lengths, hockey stick 42:50 Boreholes, corals 45:50 Forcings, CO2, CH4 47:00 Sunspots 49:00 Volcanoes 50:00 Other reconstructions, new studies 51:40 Spaghetti curve, look at envelope 54:15 Put spaghetti with hockey stick error bars 56:50 30 -
year averages warmest, 400 years likely, 1000 years plausible 58:15 end of talk 58:50 MWP likely varied globally 01:01:50 LIA seems more global 01:03:00 Does it have anything to do with AGW?
Not exact matches
This likely has at least a little to do with the below -
average cost of living and the
year - round
warm temperatures.
During the first third of the
year, from January through April, the
average temperature for the contiguous United States was 4 degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th - century
average, making this period the second
warmest on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
For the third consecutive
year, every state across the contiguous U.S. and Alaska was
warmer than
average.
This
year, the Atlantic was
warmer than
average — Klotzbach says August through October will likely rank third or fourth in terms of highest tropical Atlantic Ocean temperatures.
If meteorologists» predictions of a
warmer - than - normal winter are correct, a stockpile glut to the five -
year average will persist into next
year.
Warm currents of the Meditererranian Sea and an
average of 300 days of sunshine a
year determine the mild climate that lets chiles — called peperoncini in Italy — grow so well here.
I love this talk of Cech — the cech who was very good and then became very
average last
year, was replaced by Courtouis and is now a bench
warmer.
I am pissed today hearing about Olivier Giroud three
year contract and salary he is earning.That is unfair because Giroud does not deserve it.He has not worked to show that he deserves it.We should look at the quality snd output of our players before paying them.Well its too late now so we should look forward.We do nt need stats to even tell us that Girouf is usually
average for arsenal than good at most times.I would have sold him if i was Wenger because he does not deserve to be leading the line still after 3
years and i doubt he will like to
warm the bench.He is very lucky to have Wenger as a coach of arsenal london fc.Arsenal has not moved forward because we think getting rid of players is a bad thing.We always hesitate when it comes to selling players we do nt need.Arsenal need a world class cf not a world class cf.Its is time to move forward by addressing our mistakes.Since Van persie left we have needed a cf and ifBenzema is available we need to get rid of who we do nt need so that we move forward.Arsenal do not need Giroud though many may be against my speech.Once the premier league starts and Giroud is our main cf it shows that Wenger has not learnt from his mistakes.Just as we got Cech who to me was a need he needs to just find as a reliable and clinical cf.
no wonder wenger has gotten away with his dozen
years of failure when fans deliver this kind of ludicrous assessment... get of the wenger juice and get yourself cleaned up... anyway this was a tale of two very different halves so
average score is basically like saying the guy who took a bath in ice water and then in scolding water had a good time as on
average he was in
warm water!!!
The report found that while disposable nappies used over 2 1/2
years would have a global
warming impact of 550 kg of CO2 reusable nappies produced 570 kg of CO2 on
average.
There can be no doubt that the planet is
warming; 2016 was the fifth time in the 21st century a new record high annual temperature has been set (along with 2005, 2010, 2014, and 2015) and also marks the 40th consecutive
year (since 1977) that the annual temperature has been above the 20th century
average.
During the Eocene, the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was more than 560 parts per million, at least twice preindustrial levels, and the epoch kicked off with a global
average temperature more than 8 degrees Celsius — about 14 degrees Fahrenheit —
warmer than today, gradually cooling over the next 22 million
years.
But they've been especially interested in the most recent period of abrupt global
warming, the Bølling - Allerød, which occurred about 14,500
years ago when
average temperatures in Greenland rose about 15 degrees Celsius in about 3,000
years.
High fire
years, she said, almost exclusively are marked by
warmer - than -
average spring seasons followed by
warm, dry summers.
If emission reductions exceed pledges made by countries to date under the Paris Agreement, coral reefs would have another 11
years, on
average, to adapt to
warming seas before they are hit by annual bleaching.
«Sea level observations are telling us that during the past 100
years sea level has risen at an
average rate of 1.7 millimeters per
year,» most of that due to thermal expansion as the top 700 meters of the oceans
warms and expands.
«The snowpack we had this
year was below
average — around 70 percent of
average towards the end of February, followed by one of the driest,
warmest Marches on record,» said Tim Mathews, a fire meteorologist with the Rocky Mountain Coordination Center.
Around 3 million
years ago, when temperatures were just 1 to 2 °C higher than the
average of the past couple of millennia before humans began
warming the climate, sea level was at least 25 metres higher than present.
Combining the asylum - application data with projections of future
warming, the researchers found that an increase of
average global temperatures of 1.8 °C — an optimistic scenario in which carbon emissions flatten globally in the next few decades and then decline — would increase applications by 28 percent by 2100, translating into 98,000 extra applications to the EU each
year.
This water is
warming an
average of 0.03 degrees Celsius per
year, with temperatures at the deepest ocean sensors sometimes exceeding 0.3 degrees Celsius or 33 degrees Fahrenheit, Muenchow said.
However, this
year's ice cover remains far below the 1981 - 2010
average, indicating an ongoing, long - term decline of ice because of
warming temperatures, according to scientists.
When [T] he peninsula is [has]
warmed by [an]
average of 5 to 9 degrees in the last 50
years, more than anywhere else on the planet — Fahrenheit.
Of course, summer temperatures when the
warming portion of the wobble cycle peaked roughly 7,500
years ago were at least 0.8 degrees Celsius
warmer than 20th - century
average temperatures.
The strength and path of the North Atlantic jet stream and the Greenland blocking phenomena appear to be influenced by increasing temperatures in the Arctic which have
averaged at least twice the global
warming rate over the past two decades, suggesting that those marked changes may be a key factor affecting extreme weather conditions over the UK, although an Arctic connection may not occur each
year.
Every 2
years on
average, they found, the stratosphere suddenly
warms by several tens of degrees Celsius.
If climate change gets catastrophic — and the world sees more than 6 degrees Celsius
warming of
average temperatures — the planet will have left the current geologic period, known as the Quaternary and a distant successor to the Ordovician, and have returned to temperatures last seen in the Paleogene period more than 30 million
years ago.
«The result is not a surprise, but if you look at the global climate models that have been used to analyze what the planet looked like 20,000
years ago — the same models used to predict global
warming in the future — they are doing, on
average, a very good job reproducing how cold it was in Antarctica,» said first author Kurt Cuffey, a glaciologist at the University of California, Berkeley, and professor of geography and of earth and planetary sciences.
From the height of the last glacial period 21,000
years ago to our current interglacial period, the Earth has
warmed by an
average of five degrees Celsius.
One period of particular interest is a
warm, wet interglacial stage known as the Eemian that occurred from 124,000 to 119,000
years ago, featuring
average global temperatures about 2 °C
warmer than today.
Following Earth's last ice age, which peaked 20,000
years ago, the Antarctic
warmed between two and three times the
average temperature increase worldwide, according to a new study by a team of American geophysicists.
Bowen and colleagues report that carbonate or limestone nodules in Wyoming sediment cores show the global
warming episode 55.5 million to 55.3 million
years ago involved the
average annual release of a minimum of 0.9 petagrams (1.98 trillion pounds) of carbon to the atmosphere, and probably much more over shorter periods.
The statewide
average temperature for the first six months of 2014 was 1.1 degree F
warmer than it has been for the past 120
years of records
Heating typically accounts for about 28 percent of the
average American home's energy use, but this
year staying
warm might occupy a larger slice of the household expenditure pie.
With an El Niño now under way — meaning
warm surface waters in the Pacific are releasing heat into the atmosphere — and predicted to intensify, it looks as if the global
average surface temperature could jump by around 0.1 °C in just one
year.
Temperatures at the Antarctic Peninsula have increased by 2.5 degrees Celsius over the last 50
years,
warming that is much faster than the concurrent
average global temperature increase.
Ocean Only: The global ocean surface temperature for the
year to date was 0.99 °F (0.55 °C) above
average, tying with 2010 as the second
warmest such period on record, behind only 1998.
If 2014 maintains this temperature departure from
average for the remainder of the
year, it will be the
warmest year on record.
January aside, the National Weather Service predicts that swaths of the country stretching from the Southwest to the Southeast will be
warmer than
average this
year.
Average composite reflectivity over the CONUS (contiguous US) domain in all 13
years of the simulations are shown by season (May - June and July - August) and by simulation type (control and psuedo global
warming).
It shows a record
warming spell earlier this
year, which continues to drive up the 5 -
year average of heat content, shown in blue.
The last 10
years have, on
average, been as
warm as a normal one
year in 500
warm spell.»
The group also used a general circulation model to predict what might be expected to happen in the world's wine locales in the next 50
years and determined that an
average additional
warming of two degrees C may occur.
Results of a new study by researchers at the Northeast Climate Science Center (NECSC) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst suggest that temperatures across the northeastern United States will increase much faster than the global
average, so that the 2 - degrees Celsius
warming target adopted in the recent Paris Agreement on climate change will be reached about 20
years earlier for this part of the U.S. compared to the world as a whole.
Global
average sea level has risen by roughly 0.11 inch (3 millimeters) per
year since 1993 due to a combination of water expanding as it
warms and melting ice sheets.
As
average U.S. temperatures
warm between 3 °F and more than 9 °F by the end of the century, depending on how greenhouse gas emissions are curtailed or not in the coming
years, the waves of extreme heat the country is likely to experience could bend and buckle rails into what experts call «sun kinks.»
This
year, the event will benefit from an unseasonably
warm winter, with satellite data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrationplacing the
average water surface temperature around Coney Island in December at about 48 degrees Fahrenheit (8.9 degrees Celsius).