News & Views item - February 2010

 

 

Weather is Not Climate. (February 15, 2010)

Does the US East Coast's "snowpocalypse" disprove global warming, or is it a harbinger of things to come in a warmer world—policy guru Roger Pielke Jr.* offers the following:

 

Let's see if I can make this simple.

 

What happens in the weather this week or next tells us absolutely nothing about the role of humans in influencing the climate system. It is unjustifiable to claim that a cold snap or heavy snow disproves or even casts doubts predictions of long-term climate change. It is equally unjustifiable to say that a cold snap or heavy snow in any way offers empirical support for predictions of long-term climate change. This goes for all weather events.

 

Further, it is professionally irresponsible for scientists to claim that some observed weather is "consistent with" long-term predictions of climate change. Any and all weather fits this criteria. Similarly, any and all weather is also "consistent with" failing predictions of long-term climate change. The "consistent with" canard is purposely misleading.

 

Knowledge of climate requires long-term records -- on the time scale of a decade and longer. Don't look to the weather to learn about climate, unless you have a long time to watch. Using the weather to score cheap political points in the climate debate appears to be a tactical area of agreement among those who otherwise disagree about climate change.

 

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*Roger Pielke, Jr. is  professor of environmental studies at the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He also holds appointment as a Senior Visiting Fellow at the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes at Arizona State University and as a Senior Fellow of The Breakthrough Institute.