A lot has happened since last August, including Cowton and Way, so we know ther has been no hiatus and the trend continues upward. The PDO switched from the positive, warm phase to the negative, cool phase early in this century which tends to obscure the warming due to the enhanced greenhouse effect (you'll have noticed that the cool phase of the PDO hasn't caused any cooling) but it's still warmer now globally than in the early 2000's. Not that thirteen years, with a PDO shift in it, tells us anything much really.I get my science from Science and Nature where do you get yours?
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature12534.html
You can say it kept rising until the cows come home. It ain't going to make it true.
Natural climate variability, which would naturally have cooled the average temperature. But it didn't. Check out UAH. Also the Sun is quiet, and no cooling. Warming, in fact. That's the enhanced greenhouse effect in action. Without a La Nina every two or three years you just can't keep it out of sight."Here we show that accounting for recent cooling in the eastern equatorial Pacific reconciles climate simulations and observations. We present a novel method of uncovering mechanisms for global temperature change by prescribing, in addition to radiative forcing, the observed history of sea surface temperature over the central to eastern tropical Pacific in a climate model. Although the surface temperature prescription is limited to only 8.2% of the global surface, our model reproduces the annual-mean global temperature remarkably well with correlation coefficient r = 0.97 for 1970–2012 (which includes the current hiatus and a period of accelerated global warming). Moreover, our simulation captures major seasonal and regional characteristics of the hiatus, including the intensified Walker circulation, the winter cooling in northwestern North America and the prolonged drought in the southern USA. Our results show that the current hiatus is part of natural climate variability, tied specifically to a La-Niña-like decadal cooling. Although similar decadal hiatus events may occur in the future, the multi-decadal warming trend is very likely to continue with greenhouse gas increase."
A lot has happened since last August, including Cowton and Way, so we know ther has been no hiatus and the trend continues upward. The PDO switched from the positive, warm phase to the negative, cool phase early in this century which tends to obscure the warming due to the enhanced greenhouse effect (you'll have noticed that the cool phase of the PDO hasn't caused any cooling) but it's still warmer now globally than in the early 2000's. Not that thirteen years, with a PDO shift in it, tells us anything much really.
From that science you get :
Natural climate variability, which would naturally have cooled the average temperature. But it didn't. Check out UAH. Also the Sun is quiet, and no cooling. Warming, in fact. That's the enhanced greenhouse effect in action. Without a La Nina every two or three years you just can't keep it out of sight.
A negative PDO doesn't preclude an El Nino, of course, so you'd be risking a lot to nail your flag to surface temperatures as the be-all and end-all. If the Pause is important to you, how can its loss not be? Better to shrug it off now.
Foster and Rahmstorf had been saying it even before then.A lot has happened since last August, including Cowton and Way, so we know ther has been no hiatus and the trend continues upward. The PDO switched from the positive, warm phase to the negative, cool phase early in this century which tends to obscure the warming due to the enhanced greenhouse effect (you'll have noticed that the cool phase of the PDO hasn't caused any cooling) but it's still warmer now globally than in the early 2000's. Not that thirteen years, with a PDO shift in it, tells us anything much really.
From that science you get :
Natural climate variability, which would naturally have cooled the average temperature. But it didn't. Check out UAH. Also the Sun is quiet, and no cooling. Warming, in fact. That's the enhanced greenhouse effect in action. Without a La Nina every two or three years you just can't keep it out of sight.
A negative PDO doesn't preclude an El Nino, of course, so you'd be risking a lot to nail your flag to surface temperatures as the be-all and end-all. If the Pause is important to you, how can its loss not be? Better to shrug it off now.
\moreEl Niño may make 2014 the hottest year on record
20:00 10 February 2014 by Michael Slezak
Hold onto your ice lollies. Long-term weather forecasts are suggesting 2014 might be the hottest year since records began. That's because climate bad-boy El Niño seems to be getting ready to spew heat into the atmosphere.
An El Niño occurs when warm water buried below the surface of the Pacific rises up and spreads along the equator towards America. For nine months or more it brings rain and flooding to areas around Peru and Ecuador, and drought and fires to Indonesia and Australia. It is part of a cycle called the El Niño-Southern Oscillation.

It's funny, because you sound like the denier now.Evidence be damned! Full speed ahead!
Those claiming iot has kept warming, you also can't show any actual evidence to support your position.http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature12534.html
You can say it kept rising until the cows come home. It ain't going to make it true.
Just wave your hands real fast. Here's another way to understand what it sounds like.<cough> <cough> <cough>
Sorry, I had to fight my way to air from all that straw.
It's funny, because you sound like the denier now. Those claiming iot has kept warming, you also can't show any actual evidence to support your position.
Here's a way to understand what it sounds like...
Recent global-warming hiatus
SourcesDespite the continued increase in atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations, the annual-mean global temperature has not risen in the twenty-first century
Those who still want to tell you it's still warming, faster than ever, they are science deniers.
The paper doesn't support your contention. It's actually refuting the claim that there is a real pause. It says the energy imbalance is still there and that La Nina conditions are causing global temperatures to come in below trend.I get my science from Science and Nature where do you get yours?
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature12534.html
You can say it kept rising until the cows come home. It ain't going to make it true.
Now hold on there, we all know you is going to post something to try and say Nature is wrong in publishing that. Or try and explain the conclusions of the paper in a different way.
Our results show that the current hiatus is part of natural climate variability, tied specifically to a La-Niña-like decadal cooling. Although similar decadal hiatus events may occur in the future, the multi-decadal warming trend is very likely to continue with greenhouse gas increase.