'BEAST FROM THE EAST': Europe is so cold now that the Arctic appears to be a warm esc

spaminator

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'BEAST FROM THE EAST': Europe is so cold now that the Arctic appears to be a warm escape
Washington Post
More from Washington Post
Published:
February 28, 2018
Updated:
February 28, 2018 11:02 AM EST
The icy Alfred Escher fountain is pictured in Zurich, Switzerland, Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2018.(Melanie Duchene/Keystone via AP)
LONDON – Much of Europe woke up to yet another day of a cold spell on Wednesday that may have turned the streets of London, Rome and other capitals into pretty photo scenes but also has cost lives across the continent. Neither London nor Rome usually experience temperatures dropping below freezing during winters.
Europeans seeking to escape the blast of icy air dubbed the “Beast from the East” to warmer places may want to think about heading north rather than south. As Europe is buried under snow, the Arctic is witnessing one of its warmest winters ever. In fact, parts of the Arctic Circle have been warmer than much of Europe over the past few days.
“It’s never been this warm. It’s really, really unprecedented, I would say,” Ruth Mottram, a climate scientist for the Danish Meteorological Institute, told German broadcaster DW.
A man walks along a mole covered with ice and icicles on the Lake Constance on February 28, 2018 in Constance as a blast of Siberian weather dubbed the “Beast from the East” kept the mercury far below zero in huge parts of Europe. (STEFFEN SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)
While occasional warm winters in the Arctic have been observed since 1896, climate change scientists say that the current string of warm Arctic winters is part of a disturbing new pattern that could be linked to colder European temperatures.
“These (winter warming) events are not unusual, but they are happening more frequently and with longer durations,” said Robert Graham, a climate scientist at the Norwegian Polar Institute in Tromsø, Norway, according to the American Geophysical Union (AGU).
Graham and other scientists recently teamed up for a study on the phenomenon and found that storms may be responsible for the unusual frequency of warming events. “In the most recent years of the study, each warming event was associated with a major storm entering the region. During these storms, strong winds from the south blow warm, moist air from the Atlantic into the Arctic,” said an AGU summary of Graham’s findings. Even though the exact mechanisms that are driving the proliferation of storms are still unknown, the researchers believe that climate change is likely to be blamed.
Storms that make temperatures rise in the Arctic can have the opposite impact in Europe, as they weaken the low-pressure zone known as “polar vortex” that usually keeps the icy air in the Arctic. Their impact can be felt in both places.
A car drives down a snow-covered road in Palavas-les-Flots, in the south of France, on February 28, 2018. (PASCAL GUYOT/AFP/Getty Images)
While mayors across Europe are launching emergency schemes to shelter homeless people and prevent more freezing deaths, researchers in the Arctic fear ripple effects, saying that the storms have “raised temperatures in the region close to the melting point, hindered sea ice growth while its associated strong winds pushed the sea ice edge back, leading to a record low spring sea ice pack in 2016,” according to the researchers quoted on AGU’s website.
Scientists fear that the record-low sea ice will speed up the melting of the Arctic permafrost and polar ice caps, eventually leading to sea level rises across the globe, drowning many of the world’s most important cities.
This winter could be even worse, with almost a third of the Bering Sea’s ice cover vanishing within days.
The warnings do not appear to have triggered much concern in the White House, so far. The United States is now the only nation in the world that rejects the 2015 Paris climate accord, after the other two nations outside of the agreement, Nicaragua and Syria, signed it.
The chief of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has led recent efforts to question the existing climate change science, reflecting skepticism within the U.S. government about the scale of the challenge. The EPA also rejected claims that devastating hurricanes in recent weeks were worsened by climate change.
President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris accord came last summer as the White House was preparing to rewrite Obama-era rules that were supposed to curb greenhouse gas emissions. U.S. officials feared that being part of the Paris climate agreement and seeking to reverse some of those curbs could have weakened the U.S. government’s position in future lawsuits.
But climate change researchers and U.S. allies abroad fear that Trump may ultimately come to regret his decision, as the absence of action’s repercussions are emerging more clearly.
‘BEAST FROM THE EAST’: Europe is so cold now that the Arctic appears to be a warm escape | Toronto Sun
 

taxslave

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Quick! Send a couple of Billion to some banana republic diktator that should fix it.

Some of our friends in Germany have remarked on how cold it is. Not exactly sunshine and palm trees on the wet coast either again this year.
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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LOL, you breathed out?
;)
so much for holding your breath till you turn blue.
 

Danbones

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Yes, global warming makes it warmer, and global warming makes it colder.
;)
Normal rules of reality have left the building.
 

mentalfloss

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Pssst, they don't call it that anymore for that very reason.
Cuz they got called out on the snow.

Now, it's Climate Change.

Pass the word.

Global warming is the average temperature of the globe rising.

Climate change is the localized effect of global warming.

For example, global warming is the heating of the planet and one of the consequences is the short term cooling from displaced currents (climate change).
 

pgs

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Your just described weather.
No when it is cold , fall , winter , early spring , it is weather , in the summer when it is hot it is global warming . All extreme weather events are caused by and are prime examples of climate change .
 

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
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No when it is cold , fall , winter , early spring , it is weather , in the summer when it is hot it is global warming . All extreme weather events are caused by and are prime examples of climate change .
No no no no no....It's cold here in the winter because it's hot in Florida or somewhere else in the world so it's global warming

Haven't you learned anything after all this preaching by the faithfuls?
 

Blackleaf

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Much of Britain's freezing weather every winter comes from the Ural Mountains in western Russia. It's freezing today with the odd snow flurry.
 

captain morgan

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A Mouse Once Bit My Sister
And headed where? Is Canada going to turn its back on $3 trillion worth of oil in the ground?

Bar Sinister can not identify what will be replacing oil/gas, nor can he understand the infrastructure requirements to roll-out this fantasy program.

he's a perfect example of one that is driven by ideology rather than reality

Much of Britain's freezing weather every winter comes from the Ural Mountains in western Russia. It's freezing today with the odd snow flurry.

Not true... What Britain is experiencing is an extreme inverted tropical vortex bomb event

They are the most deadly of all inverted tropical vortex bombs
 

pgs

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Much of Britain's freezing weather every winter comes from the Ural Mountains in western Russia. It's freezing today with the odd snow flurry.
I thought we were told a couple of years ago that snow was a thing from the past in Britain .