The South Pole temperature was 21st highest out of 68 years. The year-to-date average is 13th highest of 69 years. As always things are kind of weird down there:
Quark Soup by David Appell
Thursday, July 03, 2025
Arctic Sea Ice Extent Record Low
The South Pole temperature was 21st highest out of 68 years. The year-to-date average is 13th highest of 69 years. As always things are kind of weird down there:
Tuesday, July 01, 2025
Europe's Heat Wave
Working outdoors has also been banned during the hottest parts of the day on building sites, roads, and farms until September, in Lombardy.Link.
In Germany, record-breaking temperatures of 100 degrees Fahrenheit could take place on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Hospital admissions rose by 20% in the Tuscany region in Italy, according to local reports.
The heat wave was characterized as a heat dome because of the extreme temperatures and the exceptionally strong ridge centered over the area, whose probability of formation was linked to the effects of climate change by multiple studies.
Friday, June 27, 2025
Corrupt US Supreme Court Makes an Unbelievable Decision
Every day now America finds itself in a new nightmare, and today's is something you're expect to see in a truly autocratic country: rights guaranteed by the US Constitution are now effectively subject to the whim of the president. Yes, really, that's what the US Supreme Court ruled today.
In particular, the SCOTUS case was about birthright citizenship--do individuals born on US soil have the right to be a US citizen? The Constitution unequivocally says yes:
Fourteenth AmendmentCouldn't be clearer, right?
Section 1
All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.
Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who wrote the majority opinion, said the judiciary does not have “unbridled authority to enforce” the executive’s obligation to follow the law, because doing so would create an “imperial judiciary.” (NY Times, free link)
Those without resources to sue, Jackson wrote in a separate dissent, are disproportionately “the poor, the uneducated and the unpopular,” and so they will be subject to Trump’s whims. “This is yet another crack in the foundation of the rule of law,” she wrote, “which requires equality and justice in its application.” It creates two zones, she said: one where the rule of law prevails, and one “zone of lawlessness” where “all bets are off.” And that’s anathema to the universality of law that the Constitution’s authors envisioned.
Thursday, June 26, 2025
"Where do climate models go for their apology?"
Monday, June 23, 2025
Friday, June 20, 2025
Look, Another Healthy Country!
The Austrian government on Wednesday proposed a bundle of new laws on private gun ownership, eight days after the deadliest school shooting in the country’s history.Here in the US not enough Americans care enough about little kids being murdered by big guns to do anything of the sort. It's often said that that was clearly the country's decision after the Sandy Hook school shooting of 2012, killed by a crazy 20-year old who killed 26 people, mostly six- and seven-year olds, and six teachers. (Not sure if that includes his mother, who he shot and killed before leaving for the school.)
The measures include raising the minimum age to own some firearms, including handguns, to 25 from 21, strengthening the mandatory psychological test that must be passed to buy a gun and instituting a four-week waiting period between the purchase and the delivery of a first weapon.
- The New York Times, yesterday (free link)
There is one particular image about that event I can't get out of my head. About a dozen students and one (I think) teacher went into a closet to hide. It was 3 ft by 4 ft. The shooter came and opened the door and rapidly fired with one of his five guns. Into the closet, packed full of people. One child survived, somehow. Can you imagine. Can you even imagine being the police official who found this scene. Can you imagine being the child who survived. Can you imagine the parents who have to think about this every day since.
Last year there were 39 school shootings in the US that injured or killed someone. Yet not one new law on gun restrictions, as far as I know. We just have to put up with it. My sister had to run out of a store at the mall when a shooting began. I've personally had a neighbor point a rifle at me. (I called the police and he was arrested, lost his & his wife's apartment, but I was never able to ascertain if he had been convicted of anything.)
Saturday, June 14, 2025
New Record for Ocean Heat Content
Ocean heat content reached a record high in the first quarter of this year:
data: 0-700 m, 0-2000 m
The quarterly changes were mostly negative for the three quarters before this one, but this time increased by large amounts: 3.1 W/m2 for the 0-700 m region and 3.0 W/m2 for the 0-2000 m region.
Over four quarters the increases were 0.2 W/m2 and 07 W/m2, respectively.
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
1.5°C by 2035
Note 6/10 2:20 pm: Oops, this is the graph is for Mays. I've put the graph for all months down at the bottom. Sorry.
Here's a graph Berkeley Earth presented today:
The trend, a 30-year LOESS smooth regression (the thin red line), is a little over 1.3°C right now. Their trend is 0.20°C/decade, perhaps (paper coming out next month) 0.25°C/decade.
That means the trend line will hit 1.5°C in about a decade. The 2023-2024 warming spike will then appear relatively cool from that perspective.
0.25°C/decade is a monstrous value. (Even 0.20°C/decade is.) It's hard to get one's head around it, it's such a rapid increase. It's changing the future incredibly fast. It's like the last ice age global maximum went to the Holocene in only 240 years, instead of the actual 12,000 years it actually took. Warming now is 50 times faster.
It's just worthless now to talk about limiting warming to 1.5°C. It will not happen, hard stop. At that point 2.0°C will be here by 2055-2060, looking also a done deal. It's tragic, and absolute failure of world leadership. The worst failure in human history.
Extremely discouraging.
==
Added, as noted at the beginning of the post: Average global temperatures for all months:
Americans to Pay More to Cause Even More Climate Change
A 63-year-old coal-fired power plant was scheduled to permanently close its doors in Michigan on June 1. So was an oil- and gas-powered plant that was built in the 1960s in Pennsylvania.
But at the last minute, the Trump administration ordered both to stay open. The orders came as it pursues a far-reaching plan to boost fossil fuels, including coal, by declaring a national “energy emergency.”
The grid operators in Michigan and Pennsylvania said they hadn’t asked for the orders and hadn’t planned on using the plants this summer.
The costs to keep the plants open, which could total tens of millions of dollars, are expected to fall on consumers. Experts have said there’s little evidence of a national energy emergency, and 15 states have sued to challenge President Trump’s declaration, which was issued the day he took office.
2nd-warmest May Globally
Both Copernicus and Berkeley Earth reported today that May 2025 was the 2nd warmest May -- in BE's case, since 1850.
BE had a Monthly Press Briefing Zoom call this morning with more details:
- May 2025 was 1.33 C above the 1850-1900 average
- that's 0.15 C below April 2025 and the first month in 12 months below 1.5 C
- 2nd warmest Spring (Mar-May)
- 2nd warmest spring (March-May)
- 5th warmest May for land temperatures
- Third warmest May for ocean temps
- notable: the marine heat wave around UK, probably due to short-term meteorological conditions
- 4% of the Earth’s surface had a locally record warm May average
- 1% of land surfaces and 5% of ocean surfaces
- India cool in May; record high rainfall
- A city in central India had coolest May in 100 yrs
- Land only anomaly – +1.62 C above 1850-1900 avg
- Ocean third warmest for May, +0.99 C
- Probabilities for 2025:
- 5% chance 2025 could be the warmest yar
- 50% chance 2025 is 2nd warmest year on record
- 43% chance to be above 1.5 C
- Long-term trend presently reads 1.4 C, rising at 0.2 C/decade.
- 2023/2024 warming spike likely to be the average year a decade from now
- Paper coming out next month: rate of rise has increased to 0.25 C/decade
- Likely due to declining aerosols
Monday, June 02, 2025
HadCET: Warmest Meteorological Spring
Meteorological spring is March to May. (*In the Northern Hemisphere.)
The Hadley Central England Temperature (HadCET) just had the warmest meteorological spring in its 367-year history.
(OK, it's really only 303 years, because some of those early years had temperatures taken inside buildings, etc., not in a systematic fashion, but can you really blame them for trying?)
But still, 303 years. That's pretty impressive.
And this year's March-April-May average saw the warmest temperature anomaly in that little region, 2.26°C, which was the same as last year's value, exactly.
Baseline is 1901-2000.
Still, this year's year-to-date average only ranks 11th highest in all those years.
But things are cooking.
The 10-year moving average for HadCET is at a maximum, 0.52°C higher than 10 years (120 months) ago.
The 50-year linear trend is an impressive 0.31°C/decade.
But it's just a little region in England.
Some Retractions and Clarifications
Excellent Anthropology YouTube Channel: @stefanmilo
"To ensure I'm not spewing bollocks into the void I follow these golden rules:It's very engaging and has really open my eyes to world of anthropology (in a way a 6-9 pm college course never did) and the modern issues within it. One of the best channels I've found in awhile.
Use only academic sources for my videos Share those sources with the viewers Make it obvious when I'm just giving my personal opinion
No Atlantis, No Aliens, No Nonsense."
Friday, May 30, 2025
from E B White
"I would feel more optimistic about a bright future for man if he spent less time proving that he can outwit Nature and more time tasting her sweetness and respecting her seniority."from the 2016 book The Myth of Human Supremacy by Derrick Jensen, which I'm reading now and gives a lot to think about.
E. B. White