Spring Anomalies From BC To SoCal; HadCRUT Disappears 0.15C From 1940s Warming 'Blip'; "Climate Crisis Is Making Turbulence Worse"; + New Poll Shows Youth Losing Faith In Climate Change
The youth are stirring first.
Spring Anomalies From BC To SoCal
Environment Canada is issuing snow warning for British Columbia's southern mountain passes.
The weather office issued special weather statements Tuesday for the Coquihalla Highway, Allison Pass, Okanagan Connector and Kootenay Pass, warning that an upper trough of low pressure will deliver Arctic air to the BC Interior this week.
Environment Canada says snowfall can be expected through Wednesday, particularly during the early hours. It is encouraging travelers planning to take the affected highways to be prepared and monitor snowfall conditions.
This part of the world has been enduring significant cold anomalies of late, stretching from NE Canada down through the majority of the Western US:
The cold isn't expected to shift anytime soon, either.
Below is Sunday, May 26:
The snow will also persist, even into June for some:
HadCRUT Disappears 0.15C From 1940s Warming 'Blip' As Proposed In 2009
Back in 2009, overseers of the HadCRUT global temperature dataset wrote of "correcting" the "1940s warming blip" in emails that they later tried to hide from Freedom Of Information Act investigators, aka 'Climategate'.
“So, if we could reduce the ocean blip by, say, 0.15 degC, then this would be significant for the global mean — but we’d still have to explain the land blip.” ... “I’ve chosen 0.15 here deliberately.” ... “It would be good to remove at least part of the 1940s blip, but we are still left with ‘why the blip?’”
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