I wanted to present the North Atlantic sea surface temperature anomalies in a different way… expressing them in terms of standard deviations from a recent baseline as well as the probability of observing what has been observed so far this year (assuming a normal distribution). pic.twitter.com/hse39S3Cwr
Above average sea surface temperature along almost the entire European coast line – with the exception of the Eastern Mediterranean and parts of the North Atlantic.
The cooling effect of anthropogenic SOx over the oceans before 2020 was estimated about -1.11 W/m², based on observational evidence:https://t.co/4JMwf75Skl
Once again, as a result of unusually low sea ice conditions at both poles (especially in the Antarctic), global ice extent is currently the lowest on record for the time of year…
While climate scientists have been talking about North Atlantic sea surface temperatures these last few days, what's going on with sea ice in Antarctica is even more extreme, nearly 2.4 million km² below the 1991-2020 mean, with a big jump down today. pic.twitter.com/U6bjo8Kti4
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) June 14, 2023