We get the same kind of response from the climate change
denial lobby, whichever side of the North Atlantic they operate on: Sean
Hannity of Fox News Channel (fair and balanced my arse) telling “It snowed
in Houston ... there’s no global warming”, or Christopher Booker telling
his faithful Telegraph readers “I woke yesterday to find six inches of
global warming on my lawn”.
Laugh? I thought I’d never start. But that misses the point,
as does this week’s sudden shock horror to find that it’s possible to see snow
in May (clearly there are a lot of folks too young to remember 1979). It may
have been much cooler than usual for mid-May this week, but global temperature
averages are exactly what it says on the tin: it isn’t just about one location
in the UK or USA.
To illustrate this point in as straightforward a way as
possible, let’s look at current
temperatures for London: these are lower than average for mid-May, with a
high today of just 13 Celsius and a low tonight of 9. This compares with the average
high of 17.7, and low of 8.4 degrees. But, as I’ve already told, it is not just
about one location, and to show this, let’s look further east.
I’ve taken three examples, the first being the Polish
capital of Warsaw. Average
high and low temperatures for mid-May are 19.4 and 8.6 degrees. Now look at
today’s forecast from the BBC: this shows an expected high of 26 degrees, and a
low of 17. That’s significantly above the average, and a rather larger positive
variation than the negative one for London.
Let’s take another example from eastern Europe, the Ukranian
capital city of Kiev, which lies on approximately the same latitude as Plymouth,
although its winters are far more harsh. Average high and low
temperatures for mid-May are 20.7 and 10.8 degrees. Moving right along to
today’s forecast, this shows rather different high and low of 28 and 16
degrees respectively.
Again, the variation is significant, and the higher than average
temperatures extend over a wide area: consider the Russian capital of Moscow. Average high and low
temperatures for mid-May are 18.6 and 10.7 degrees respectively. The
forecast for today predicts rather higher values of 29 and 16. It looks hot and
probably humid, with the odd shower, for Muscovites today.
Yes, temperatures may be lower than average across the UK,
but that does not give the global picture.
The problem with taking average temperatures for one location is that global
temperature only averages out across the whole of the globe, and so that kind
of approach is meaningless – unless everywhere else is showing a similar effect
or trend. And that ends today’s meteorology lesson.
What you will not read
in far too many papers over the next few days.
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