Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Study on Arctic warmth draws heated debate

- By Amina Khan

Those severe winter storms that have been plaguing the East Coast might be linked to a rapidly warming Arctic, according to a new study on Arctic temperatur­es and extreme weather in a dozen U.S. cities.

While the findings published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions build on earlier studies that have looked into this connection, they drew criticism from other researcher­s who questioned some aspects of the work.

“The basic findings are sound, but I would take issue with some of the interpreta­tion in the study,” Michael Mann, a climate scientist at Penn State University who was not involved in the study, said in an email.

The Arctic has been warming fast in recent decades, causing sea ice to shrink to record lows. This temperatur­e rise comes as global warming, fueled by the greenhouse gases released by decades of human activity, shows little sign of slowing down.

At the same time, scientists have begun to wonder whether the flurry of winter storms in the past few years might somehow be related to Arctic warming. Some work had already suggested there was a connection, but lead author Judah Cohen, an MIT climatolog­ist with Atmospheri­c and Environmen­tal Research in Lexington, Mass., wanted to see whether there was a more quantifiab­le, consistent link.

Mr. Cohen and his colleagues compared three different sources of data: an index of Arctic temperatur­es, an index that combined Arctic temperatur­es and surface pressures, and the Accumulate­d Winter Season Severity Index.

This index tracks extreme winter weather events by looking at such factors as maximum and minimum temperatur­es.

For this study, the researcher­s looked at 12 areas either in or around these cities: Seattle; Helena, Mont.; Salt Lake City; Bismarck, N.D.; Duluth, Minn.; Des Moines, Iowa; Detroit; Chicago; Milton, Mass.; New York; Washington and Atlanta.

After comparing the three indices for these areas from the years 1950 to 2016, Mr. Cohen and his colleagues found a strong link between Arctic warmth and nasty winter weather, from record-breaking cold snaps to intense snowstorms. In fact, in the Eastern United States, extreme winter weather was two to four times more likely when Arctic temperatur­es were unusually high.

In the Western U.S., the trend was more mixed and sometimes even the opposite, reflecting somewhat milder winterweat­her in general.

For this paper, the scientists did not try to pin down exactly how and why this happens, and they stressed that correlatio­n did not equal causation. Still, they did suggest that the Arctic warming potentiall­y could contribute to rougher winter weather.

“These findings suggest that the continuati­on of rapid Arctic warming and melting contribute to more frequent episodes of severe winter across the (Northern Hemisphere’s) mid-latitude continents,” the authors wrote.

That suggestion of a cause-and-effect was one of the reasons the paper came under fire from other climate scientists.

Mr. Mann pointed out that increased snowfall in the Northeaste­rn U.S. and mid-Atlantic partly reflect warmer ocean temperatur­es and stronger coastal storms, which can produce stronger nor’easters with larger snowfall totals — like many of the storms seen this season.

“This is an entirely separate mechanism from Arctic warming,” Mr. Mann said. “This example points to the limitation­s in purely observatio­nally based studies such as this one, and the importance of investigat­ing dynamical mechanisms with physically based models. There isn’t just one factor at work, but many.”

Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research in Boulder, Colo., said that many parts of the paper were “not new” andothers were “not right.”

“The link between the warm Arctic and cold in (the mid-latitudes) is an obvious one: the cold air has to go somewhere,” Mr. Trenberth said in an email. “The question is where and what is the cause.

“This study reaffirms the relationsh­ip but not its cause. The Arctic likely plays a modest role in terms of feedbacks butit is unlikely it is a cause.”

Something else might be responsibl­e for both the Arctic warming and the extreme winterweat­her, he added.

The study comes as politician­s have in recent years used winter weather to attempt to disprove the existence of climate change. Sen. James M. Inhofe, R-Okla., memorably brought a snowball into the Senate in February 2015 to suggest that climate change was not real.

 ?? Li Muzi/Xinhua/Zuma Press/TNS ?? A man takes a selfie in a March 7 snowstorm in Manhattan.
Li Muzi/Xinhua/Zuma Press/TNS A man takes a selfie in a March 7 snowstorm in Manhattan.

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