Is 2014 The Hottest Year Ever? Satellites Say No
01/16/2015 06:27 PM ET
Climate Change: The
news is ablaze with a report that 2014 was the "hottest year." But
there's no reason to be excited. The story the global warming alarmists
are trying to tell isn't the only one out there.
'For the third time in a decade," shouted the AP, "the globe sizzled to the hottest year on record, federal scientists announced Friday."
The Washington Post reported that "the year 2014 was the hottest ever measured, based on records going back to the year 1880." Bloomberg News challenged readers to "deny this" and directed them to "animation below" that documents "2014: The Hottest Year."
Hysteria also reigned at the BBC in Britain, the New Era in Africa, Australia's Sydney Morning Herald and all points in between.
In one sense, the breathless stories are correct: 2014 was the hottest year on record — by no more than four-hundredths of a degree. But that's based on surface thermometer records, which are not reliable.
Better measurement is done by satellites, and they indicate 2014 was the third-warmest in the 36 years that satellites have been used to document temperatures.
John Christy, a professor of atmospheric science and director of the Earth System Science Center at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, says the satellite data show that temperature changes since 2001 are "statistically insignificant."
As expected, though, some scientists — a few of whom are considered "distinguished" — take the hottest-ever report as confirmation that man is dangerously warming his planet due to fossil-fuel use.
But a few have kept their heads. Roger Pielke, professor of atmospheric science at Colorado State University, told the Post that "there remain significant uncertainties in the accuracy of the land portion of the surface temperature data, where we have found a significant warm bias."
Judith Curry, professor at Georgia Tech's school of earth and atmospheric sciences, said that "with 2014 essentially tied with 2005 and 2010 for hottest year," the implication is "that there has been essentially no trend in warming over the past decade."
"This 'almost' record year does not help the growing discrepancy between the climate model projections and the surface temperature observations," she added.
There's simply nothing to see here. But that's the way it's always been with the global-warming swindle.
'For the third time in a decade," shouted the AP, "the globe sizzled to the hottest year on record, federal scientists announced Friday."
The Washington Post reported that "the year 2014 was the hottest ever measured, based on records going back to the year 1880." Bloomberg News challenged readers to "deny this" and directed them to "animation below" that documents "2014: The Hottest Year."
Hysteria also reigned at the BBC in Britain, the New Era in Africa, Australia's Sydney Morning Herald and all points in between.
In one sense, the breathless stories are correct: 2014 was the hottest year on record — by no more than four-hundredths of a degree. But that's based on surface thermometer records, which are not reliable.
Better measurement is done by satellites, and they indicate 2014 was the third-warmest in the 36 years that satellites have been used to document temperatures.
John Christy, a professor of atmospheric science and director of the Earth System Science Center at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, says the satellite data show that temperature changes since 2001 are "statistically insignificant."
As expected, though, some scientists — a few of whom are considered "distinguished" — take the hottest-ever report as confirmation that man is dangerously warming his planet due to fossil-fuel use.
But a few have kept their heads. Roger Pielke, professor of atmospheric science at Colorado State University, told the Post that "there remain significant uncertainties in the accuracy of the land portion of the surface temperature data, where we have found a significant warm bias."
Judith Curry, professor at Georgia Tech's school of earth and atmospheric sciences, said that "with 2014 essentially tied with 2005 and 2010 for hottest year," the implication is "that there has been essentially no trend in warming over the past decade."
"This 'almost' record year does not help the growing discrepancy between the climate model projections and the surface temperature observations," she added.
There's simply nothing to see here. But that's the way it's always been with the global-warming swindle.
Read More At Investor's Business Daily: http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorials/011615-735156-2014-not-the-hottest-year-on-record.htm#ixzz3PuC8OlSp
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