Europe is being battered by unusually frigid conditions even as temperatures at the North Pole soar well above normal.
As the month of March 2018 started,
Kendra Pierre-Louis reported that Europe was colder than the North Pole. So, naturally, with all the hoopla around global warming for the past few decades, her
New York Times article could not only report on the (climate) news, it also had to explain how on Earth (yes, that's also meant literally) this could be the case. [Update: thanks to Ed Driscoll for
the Instalink.] In the process,
Kendra Pierre-Louis managed to repeat myths such as
the one that "human-caused climate change … is agreed upon by 97
percent of climate scientists."
Related: Unexpected!
The Puzzling Reason Why So Many People Remain Skeptical of Global Warming and Climate Change
Back to
The New York Times:
Subfreezing temperatures have spread across much of Europe over the past week, stretching from Poland to Spain. Snow fell in Rome
for the first time in six years. Norway recorded the lowest
temperatures of the cold snap: minus 43 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 42
Celsius) in the southeast part of the country on Thursday [March 1].
And
on Friday [March 2], Britain and Ireland were buffeted by a storm that brought
snow and high winds, along with cold that was expected to linger for
days.
If Europe feels like the Arctic
right now, the Arctic itself is balmy by comparison. The North Pole is
above the freezing mark in the dead of winter; there are no direct
measurements there, but merging satellite data with other temperature data
shows that temperatures soared this week to 35 degrees Fahrenheit (2
degrees Celsius). That is 50 degrees Fahrenheit above normal, and 78
degrees warmer than in parts of Norway.
The
Arctic warmth and the European cold snap have raised questions over
whether the unusual weather occurrences are linked to each other, and if
they are somehow related to climate change. Here are some answers.
Are the Arctic and European weather patterns connected?
Probably, according to Judah Cohen, a
climatologist who is director of seasonal forecasting at Atmospheric and
Environmental Research, a weather risk assessment firm. Dr. Cohen is the author of a 2017 study that linked
a warming Arctic to the intermittent blasts of cold that those of us in the Northern Hemisphere have come to know as the polar vortex.
The
polar vortex is a low-pressure system that, as its name suggests,
ordinarily rests over the North Pole. (There is also a polar vortex over
the Antarctic.)
When it behaves normally, the polar vortex helps trap cold air in the Arctic.
“It’s
locking in that cold air at the high latitudes in the Arctic region,”
Dr. Cohen said, comparing the polar vortex to a dam holding back the
frigid arctic air from the rest of the Northern Hemisphere.
But
sometimes that dam bursts as the polar vortex weakens and allows cold
air to escape the Arctic to more temperate climes. This has always
happened from time to time, but a growing body of research suggests that because of climate change the warming Arctic is weakening the polar vortex.
Why is the polar vortex weakening?
Researchers
are still figuring out how the warming Arctic is triggering the polar
vortex’s aberrant behavior. Some of them, including Dr. Cohen, point to
melting sea ice, caused by global warming. Dr. Cohen says the loss of
ice creates patterns of high pressure near the Barents Sea and Kara Sea
off northern Russia. That high pressure blocks the low-pressure system
of the polar vortex, weakening it in the process.
There
is not yet a scientific consensus over the root cause of the weakening
polar vortex; it’s fair to say that it is not as definitive as, say, the
evidence for human-caused climate change, which is agreed upon by 97
percent of climate scientists.
What happens when the polar vortex weakens?
When
the polar vortex weakens it allows cold air to escape and head south.
This is what Dr. Cohen suspects happened in late December and early
January when the Northeast United States endured some of its coldest
temperatures on record. Other researchers who conducted a
rapid analysis of the weather event aren’t so sure, though they stress theirs is just a first pass at the data.
… meanwhile, some countries like Spain that are wholly unused to the cold are freezing.
That explains why Europe is freezing, but why is the Arctic so warm right now?
Dr.
Cohen likens the Arctic to the refrigerator in your kitchen. When the
refrigerator door is closed, the fridge stays cold and the kitchen stays
warm, but if you leave the fridge door open all the cold air comes out.
Because air is spilling out of the fridge, it has to be replaced by
surrounding air — air also has to flow into the fridge, or in this case
the Arctic. And since the air outside the Arctic is warmer, it will
necessarily move in.

For the first time in over 30 years, reports
Géo, Corsica's capital is covered with snow.
Those explanations are all good'n'well, but as
a Prager U video reveals,
the New York Times is repeating a myth ("human-caused climate change … is agreed upon by 97
percent of climate scientists") that, according to Alex Epstein, Director of the Center for Industrial Progress and author of
The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels, has a shady source, is a manipulative scare tactic disguised as scientific claim, and should never be used by anyone with intellectual honesty.