Albuquerque Journal

Arctic dramatical­ly warmer this winter

Climate change may bring ‘warm arctic, cold continents’ phenomenon

- BY CHRIS MOONEY

Last month, temperatur­es in the high Arctic spiked dramatical­ly, some 36 degrees Fahrenheit above normal, with record low levels of Arctic sea ice during a time of year when this ice is supposed to be expanding during the freezing polar night.

And now this week we’re seeing another huge burst of Arctic warmth. A buoy close to the North Pole just reported temperatur­es close to the freezing point of 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 Celsius), which is tens of degrees warmer than normal for this time of year.

But these bursts of Arctic warmth don’t stand alone — last month, extremely warm North Pole temperatur­es correspond­ed with extremely cold temperatur­es over Siberia and this week there are large bursts of unseasonab­ly cold air over Alaska and Siberia once again.

It is all looking rather consistent with an outlook that has been dubbed “Warm Arctic, Cold Continents” — a notion that remains scientific­ally contentiou­s but, if accurate, is deeply consequent­ial for how climate change could unfold in the Northern Hemisphere winter.

The core idea is that the Arctic is warming up faster than the mid-latitudes and the equator, and losing its characteri­stic floating sea ice cover in the process. This also changes the Arctic atmosphere, the theory goes, and these changes interact with large scale atmospheri­c patterns, like the jet stream and the polar vortex, that affect our weather. The result can be a kind of swapping of the cold air masses of the Arctic with the warm air masses to the south of them. The Arctic then gets hot (relatively), and the mid-latitudes — such as the United States — get cold.

For now, these ideas aren’t accepted by all of the relevant scientists, but they have a core group of supporters who are publishing and citing recent events to advance their case.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Reindeer forage for food on the island of Spitsberge­n in Norway. Reindeer are getting smaller while the Arctic is getting warmer.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Reindeer forage for food on the island of Spitsberge­n in Norway. Reindeer are getting smaller while the Arctic is getting warmer.

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