The Sunday Telegraph

Another Arctic ice panic over as world temperatur­es plummet

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Inevitably, when even satellite temperatur­es were showing 2016 as “the hottest year on record”, we were going to be told last winter that the Arctic ice was at its lowest extent ever. Sure enough, before Christmas, a report from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion was greeted with such headlines as “Hottest Arctic on record triggers massive ice melt”. In March we had the BBC trumpeting another study that blamed vanishing Arctic ice as the cause of weather which led to the worst-ever smog in Beijing, warning that it “could even threaten the Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022”.

But last week we were brought back to earth by the Danish Meteorolog­ical Institute (DMI), as charted by our friend Paul Homewood on his blog Notalotofp­eopleknowt­hat, with the news that ever since December temperatur­es in the Arctic have consistent­ly been lower than minus 20C. In April the extent of Arctic sea ice was back to where it was in April 13 years ago. Furthermor­e, whereas in 2008 most of the ice was extremely thin, this year most has been at least two metres thick. The Greenland ice cap last winter increased in volume faster than at any time for years.

As for those record temperatur­es brought in 2016 by an exceptiona­lly strong El Niño, the satellites now show that in recent months global temperatur­es have plummeted by more that 0.6 degrees: just as happened 17 years ago after a similarly strong El Niño had also made 1998 the “hottest year on record”.

This means the global temperatur­e trend has now shown no further warming for 19 years. But the BBC won’t be telling us any of this. And we are still stuck with that insanely damaging Climate Change Act, which in this election will scarcely get a mention.

 ??  ?? In April the extent of Arctic sea ice was back to where it was in April 13 years ago, and most has been at least two metres thick
In April the extent of Arctic sea ice was back to where it was in April 13 years ago, and most has been at least two metres thick

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