The Denver Post

Extreme weather across the nation stumps climate-change deniers

- By Mark Gongloff Mark Gongloff is a Bloomberg Opinion editor and columnist covering climate change. He previously worked for Fortune. com, the Huffington Post and The Wall Street Journal.

Spring doesn’t begin officially for more than three weeks, but it came early to Chicago this week, with temperatur­es hitting a pleasant 74 degrees Fahrenheit Tuesday afternoon. Spring then quickly turned to summer, with severe thundersto­rms slamming the area Tuesday night, bringing hail and reported tornadoes. Then winter returned Wednesday morning, skipping fall, as the mercury plunged into the 20s, with icy winds and snow. Just a totally normal 24 hours in February.

Actually the weather around the world has been anything but normal this winter. More to the point, it has forced us to reconsider what “normal” even means anymore when global warming is making the climate increasing­ly chaotic.

“If the climate were changing more slowly, it would be harder to see,” Berkeley Earth climate scientist Zeke Hausfather said. “But it’s hard to ignore a 70-degree day in February.”

The U.S. is in the grips of a snow drought, with more ground bare of the white stuff in late February than in any other year since National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion records beginning in 2004. Ski resorts are shutting down from Indiana to the Alps. Dogsled races have been canceled. Wisconsin golf courses opened early. Just 2.7% of the Great Lakes was covered in ice in mid-february, according to the NOAA, the lowest since records begin in 1973.

This January was the world’s warmest since at least 1850, and February is on track to follow suit, according to Hausfather. Global average sea surface temperatur­es blew away the record for the hottest January ever and came close to being the hottest month ever, according to the EU’S Copernicus Climate Change Service.

Hundreds of records fell across the U.S. this week in a bizarre winter heat wave that elevated temperatur­es to 100 in Texas and 81 in St. Louis and sparked a handful of wildfires. Smoke from those fires gave

New York City an unwelcome whiff of last summer’s Canadian haze. That was followed swiftly by a whiplash-inducing temperatur­e drop of 60 degrees in some parts of the Midwest.

Some of this freakish weather is the result of strong El Niño conditions in the eastern Pacific, which tend to raise temperatur­es and wreak havoc around the world. Snow cover was also low in the U.S. in 2016, the last strong El Niño winter.

But this El Niño comes in the context of a long-term heating trend. Average global surface temperatur­es have risen 1.2 degrees Celsius from preindustr­ial averages, thanks mainly to the greenhouse gases released by burning fossil fuels. El Niño is giving that long-term trend a little extra kick.

It’s tricky to ascribe any one weather event to global warming, but a massive heat wave in February has climate change’s fingerprin­ts all over it. The nonprofit research group Climate Central estimates it made Chicago’s high temperatur­e on Tuesday four times likelier.

This winter is also a taste of what’s to come as temperatur­es keep rising. For example, this week’s heat wave was partly the result of the aforementi­oned lack of snow cover, which makes the ground hotter and drier. Add strong, dry winds from Mexico, and we got rising temperatur­es and wildfire risks. Future winter storms may be wetter and dump more snow all at once because warmer air holds more moisture. But a warmer climate also could mean fewer snowstorms in some places and in spring and fall, and snowpack tends to melt quickly in 70-degree weather.

Since 1970, winters have warmed by 3.8 degrees Fahrenheit, on average, in 233 U.S. cities studied by Climate Central. Winter is warming faster than other seasons, and colder parts of the country are warming faster than hotter ones.

All of this will spell a future of iffy snowfall and more torrential rainstorms, including the “atmospheri­c rivers” that have pounded California for much of this winter. If not managed properly, that could lead to longer wildfire seasons (Canada’s has begun) and less-reliable water supply for states that depend on snowmelt. There’s also a theory that, by upsetting the jet stream, global warming might paradoxica­lly make polar vortexes more frequent, bringing deadly cold to places that aren’t used to it.

If there’s a silver lining, a freaky February makes it much harder for skeptics to deny the reality of a changing climate. That could build support to hasten the changes needed to stop burning the fossil fuels that are warming the planet. While we wait for that, we’ll need to prepare for the consequenc­es of more wild winter weather to come.

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