Blue Mass Group

Reality-based commentary on politics.

  • Shop
  • Subscribe to BMG
  • Contact
  • Log In
  • Front Page
  • All Posts
  • About
  • Rules
  • Events
  • Register on BMG

Mild Temps, Bad Storms: MA’s Climate-Changed Winter

March 8, 2013 By thegreenmiles

DSC_0262

Plum Island, March 8, 2013 (quantumking, Flickr)

As yet another brutal winter storm hammers Massachusetts with snow, wind and coastal erosion, there’s a lot of talk about what a rough winter it’s been in Massachusetts. But our temperatures have actually been mild, and climate scientists say this type of winter is exactly what we can expect in a warming world.

First, the temperature data from NOAA’s National Weather Service Boston office:

  • Boston: December: +3.7, January +2.5, February  -0.5, March (thru 3/6): +2.5
  • Worcester: December: +4.7, January: +2.7, February +0.4, March: +1.5
  • Providence: December +4.1, January: +2.1, February:  -1.0, March: +3.0

While Boston is close to its seasonal snowfall average of 43 inches, Providence has gotten a foot more than usual and Worcester has been absolutely hammered with over 86 inches so far, nearly three feet more than average.

The National Wildlife Federation reports climate change is bringing more oddball winter weather:

Global warming is bringing a clear trend toward heavier precipitation events for the simple reason that warmer air can hold more water. Even with a greater fraction of precipitation falling as rain, many areas are still seeing big and intense snowstorms, especially in the upper Midwest and Northeast, where temperatures typically remain below freezing in winter. At the same time, global warming is shifting storm tracks northward. The last few years have brought several unusually heavy snowstorms as warmer and moister air over southern states has penetrated further north, colliding with bitter cold air masses.

As ClimateCentral.org’s Andrew Freedman details, this winter storm has also highlighted the impacts of global warming-fueled sea level rise:

Higher sea levels provide a higher launching pad for storm surges from hurricanes and nor’easters, making it possible for relatively weak storms to cause major damage.

According to research by Climate Central scientists, on Nantucket Island, where coastal flooding is occurring from this storm, the sea level has risen by about half a foot during the past 50 years.

According to the draft National Climate Assessment report released in January, even without any changes in storms, the chance of what is now a 1-in-10-year coastal flood event in the Northeast could triple by 2100, occurring once every 3 years, due to rising sea levels.

In a sane world, cutting carbon pollution and building out clean energy would be at the top of our national agenda. Instead, Congressional Republican leadership is committed to creating one new phony crisis after another, trying to decide whether to punish the old, sick, young, or all of the above as they fight to protect tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans and oil executives.

Fortunately, President Obama doesn’t have to wait for Congress to act – he has authority under the Clean Air Act to limit industrial carbon pollution. Tell President Obama you want the strongest limits possible – and if you want to do even more, join Reality Drop.

Please share widely!
fb-share-icon
Tweet
0
0

Filed Under: User Tagged With: climate, climate-change, extreme-weather, global-warming, weather

Comments

  1. Jasiu says

    March 9, 2013 at 9:07 am

    In case you missed this in the Globe yesterday…

    A new study looking at 11,000 years of climate temperatures shows the world in the middle of a dramatic U-turn, lurching from near-record cooling to a heat spike.

    Before this study, continuous temperature record reconstruction only went back about 2,000 years. The temperature trend produces a line shaped like a ‘‘hockey stick’’ with a sudden spike after what had been a fairly steady line. That data came from tree rings, ice cores and lake sediments.

    Without the introduction of greenhouse gases, we might be headed into another ice age.

    ‘We have, through human emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases, indefinitely delayed the onset of the next ice age and are now heading into an unknown future where humans control the thermostat of the planet,’’ said Katharine Hayhoe, an atmospheric scientist at Texas Tech University, responding in an email.

    Will we actually “control” it or just keep cranking it up?

Recommended Posts

  • No posts liked yet.

Recent User Posts

Predictions Open Thread

December 22, 2022 By jconway

This is why I love Joe Biden

December 21, 2022 By fredrichlariccia

Garland’s Word

December 19, 2022 By terrymcginty

Some Parting Thoughts

December 19, 2022 By jconway

Beware the latest grift

December 16, 2022 By fredrichlariccia

Thank you, Blue Mass Group!

December 15, 2022 By methuenprogressive

Recent Comments

  • blueeyes on Beware the latest griftSo where to, then??
  • Christopher on Some Parting ThoughtsI've enjoyed our discussions as well (but we have yet to…
  • Christopher on Beware the latest griftI can't imagine anyone of our ilk not already on Twitter…
  • blueeyes on Beware the latest griftI will miss this site. Where are people going? Twitter?…
  • chrismatth on A valedictoryI joined BMG late - 13 years ago next month and three da…
  • SomervilleTom on Geopolitics of FusionEVERY un-designed, un-built, and un-tested technology is…
  • Charley on the MTA on A valedictoryThat’s a great idea, and I’ll be there on Sunday. It’s a…

Archive

@bluemassgroup on Twitter

Twitter feed is not available at the moment.

From our sponsors




Google Calendar







Search

Archives

  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter




Copyright © 2025 Owned and operated by BMG Media Empire LLC. Read the terms of use. Some rights reserved.