Sorry Mainstream Media, Climate Change Has Not Caused 2023's Heatwaves...
For progressive bloviating politicians and alarmed reporters in mainstream media the cause of the present hot weather is simple:
As H.L. Mencken once said,
Climate change is a long-term phenomenon, driven by a combination of numerous factors at different locations during different eras.
A single year's spike in heatwaves is not evidence of long-term climate change; a steadily increasing trend in heatwaves would be, but that's not what the evidence shows. Instead, data show that the warming of the past 150 to 170 years has not produced a trend of increasing heatwaves.
As a result, the
modest recent rise in global temperatures serves as a
backdrop or baseline for the recent heatwave; it is not its cause.
Water vapor makes up 98 percent or more of the greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, and the subsea Hunga Tonga-Hunga Haʻapai eruption added an additional 10 to 13 percent to atmospheric water vapor.
Scientists from NASA and
the European Space Agency agree that this huge addition to the
dominant atmospheric greenhouse gas is contributing significantly to
this years' temperatures.
Before the summer heatwave struck and the mainstream media focused on climate change as the reason behind it to the exclusion of almost every other factor, the media was warning that with the shift from La Niña to El Niño, hotter temperatures would result.
The Heartland Institute and other groups held a press briefing in early July when the El Niño was officially declared, warning that as summer heated up, the mainstream media would largely begin to ignore El Niño's role in present temperatures, focusing instead on climate change.
Our concerns proved prescient.
One little discussed factor affecting this summer's temperatures is the increasingly active sun.
After a period of
relative quiescence with little solar activity, the sun has become
active again. An active sun has a direct, if modest, effect on the
Earth's temperatures.
As CNN described the situation,
The blocking patterns in Europe trapped a heat dome there as it did in the western United States.
In addition, in early July, the jet stream shifted...
These two meteorological
events combined to deliver colder than average, even fall like
temperatures, in northern Europe and across the United Kingdom in
July and into August, while locking-in, for an extended period of
time, extreme summer temperatures in a large swath of southern
European nations abutting or near the Mediterranean Sea.
As Judith Curry, Ph.D., and Jim Johnstone note,
The resulting increase in
Atlantic Ocean temperatures has been hyped in the media,
but wrongly attributed to long-term climate change
rather than localized, natural weather anomalies.
...thus their use can't be blamed for this summer's heatwaves...
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