Denial at the death of El Nino

The three major conditions of ENSO explained by NOAA.

An informative model of surface temperatures, winds, areas of rising air, and the thermocline (blue surface) in the tropical Pacific during El Niño, normal, and La Niña conditions. The three major states of ENSO are nothing to do with climate, but are tacked on to whatever is the weather. – RT
      Source: NOAA/PMEL/TAO Project Office, Dr. Michael J. McPhaden, Director.

The denial is consistent with all that warmist shrieking at the El Nino’s peak. The GWPF Observatory reports: Despite Denial, Global Temperatures Are Dropping Fast. All global temperature data sets (you can see a few of the graphs at that GWPF Observatory link) confirm that global temperature has fallen rapidly in the last few months as the recent El Nino ended. Dr David Whitehouse comments:

Over the last couple of years there have been many articles about how they have been record-breakers in global temperature. It’s often sold as a simple ‘the planet is getting warmer only because of us’ story … the concurrent El Nino was dismissed by some climate scientists as having an insignificant contribution to that record. However, there is a great deal of confusion and diversity in the assessment of its contribution. Some scientists maintain that it was the recent very strong El Nino that elevated the temperature to record levels.

So it’s over, people. The recent “record” temperatures were caused by natural variability, not man-made global warming. As you can see from the graphs, temperatures have returned to what they were before the El Nino. Notice how the so-called powerful man-made warming was easily engulfed by natural forces. It was no more than meagre.

But did you think we said global warming was finished? We only said the El Nino was over. Who knows about global warming? We’ll have to wait and see.

Here are two of those lying global data sets, for your convenience.

Back to levels before the El Nino

Back to levels before the El Nino

 

The El Nino is all spent. No more high temperatures — so that's good news, isn't it?

The El Nino is all spent.

No more high temperatures — what good news! You do agree?

PS:

Some look to psychology to explain climate science’s poor communication. But when examining evidence, say for example a record of temperature, what psychological impulse is involved in accepting those observations over the contrary assertions of others? What psychology makes that credible? It looks to me less like a deficiency to be corrected than precisely that desire for truth we would, on all sides, declare for ourselves. That is of course manifested in speech. Science (which means knowledge)—is truth; psychology looks like speculation leavened with hope. Abuse, rancorous disparagement and dissembling are evil.

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10 Thoughts on “Denial at the death of El Nino

  1. Magoo on 06/12/2016 at 1:57 pm said:

    ‘No more high temperatures — what good news! You do agree?’

    Damn, I was hoping the El Nino would continue to enhance another one of our glorious NZ summers. Still, I’m sure all the extra CO2 in the air will help my veggie garden regardless, and the beach still looks inviting.

  2. Richard Treadgold on 06/12/2016 at 2:08 pm said:

    Heh, heh. It’s still spring, so there’ll be a bit more rain yet, and summer temperatures, even unmoderated by our SUVs, will be as high as ever—we’re only talking about half a degree we’ve lost from the top of the El Nino. No need to despair, Magoo! 😉

  3. Paul on 06/12/2016 at 2:10 pm said:

    Wind farm corruption in NZ exposed. This needs a separate post IMO
    http://www.wakeupkiwi.com/news-articles-42.shtml#Windfarm

  4. Simon on 06/12/2016 at 2:33 pm said:

    How do you explain that the 2015/16 El Niño was significantly warmer than 1997/98, despite 1997/98 being a larger event? It’s the trend we are interested in: https://tamino.wordpress.com/2016/12/05/how-much-from-el-nino/#more-9049

  5. Magoo on 06/12/2016 at 2:53 pm said:

    Simon:

    You mean that the 2015/16 El Nino released more stored heat to space than in 1997/98 El Nino? Lucky we have El Nino’s to cool the Earth when it starts warming up.

  6. Richard Treadgold on 06/12/2016 at 3:52 pm said:

    Simon,

    How do you explain that the 2015/16 El Niño was significantly warmer than 1997/98, despite 1997/98 being a larger event? It’s the trend we are interested in

    Yes, the trend is what we want but I don’t believe you can declare a trend on just two data points; have you done so? What do you mean by a larger event? Tamino doesn’t use the term; temperature is everything, I think. Generally, explanations of El Nino are impossible, since we don’t know what causes them. Do you agree?

  7. Richard Treadgold on 06/12/2016 at 3:56 pm said:

    Magoo,

    Lucky we have El Nino’s to cool the Earth when it starts warming up.

    Precisely! Good work! Simon tries to imply the El Nino permanently warms the earth, when the graph above clearly shows it’s transient, which means the El Nino cools the earth. Heard of negative feedback? 400 billion years of it?

  8. Richard Treadgold on 06/12/2016 at 4:08 pm said:

    Paul,

    Wind farm corruption in NZ exposed. This needs a separate post IMO

    Thanks for the link. Yes, it needs a separate post, but I’m not sure I can investigate it. I didn’t find evidence straight away, which makes me nervous. Wakeupkiwi looks long on drama, short on research. Perhaps you could write it up with references and send it to me?

  9. Paul on 06/12/2016 at 4:32 pm said:

    Thanks, Richard. How can I get hold of you?

  10. Richard Treadgold on 06/12/2016 at 4:38 pm said:

    I’ll respond offline.

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