Photo NASA.

Temperatures in one part of the south Atlantic have cooled faster over the past three months than at any time on record since 1982. Are we exposed to FAKE information regarding global warming?

Temperatures are really dropping. A strange shift in temperatures from warm to cold has begun in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean since May, and it is happening at record speed. This emerging pattern, a kind of “Atlantic Niña,” appears to be occurring just before an expected transition to a cooler La Niña in the Pacific Ocean. A series of consecutive events that could have a domino effect on the global climate.

Comparing 2023. “We are starting to see that global average ocean temperatures are dropping, global sea surface temperatures last July were slightly cooler than in July 2023, ending a 15-month streak of record-breaking average ocean temperatures.

The year 2024 began with very warm ocean waters in the eastern equatorial Atlantic, but a rapid transition to relatively cooler waters was observed from late May, June and July. In fact, this was the fastest transition ever recorded.

Still unexplained. Interestingly, the cooling coincided with a weakening of the trade winds, which would normally result in the opposite. This is one of the reasons why the scientific community is unsure how or why this is happening. In fact, further research will be needed to understand the event.

Phenomena that influence each other. So, we have La Niña developing as we approach the peak hurricane season in 2024, which would favor an active season. However, we also have an Atlantic Niña that could delay what would otherwise be the long-predicted hyperactive season. That is, only if the Atlantic Niña actually develops.

For all that, experts say that at the moment it is difficult to predict exactly how, but there is reason to think that the Atlantic Niña could delay the development of the Pacific La Niña, slowing its cooling effects on the entire global climate.

One theory, which I have, is that the extremely cold air currents from the Antarctic and the South Atlantic have this year pushed the warm weather in North Africa up towards Southern Europe. We have therefore experienced the summer of 2024 as extremely hot. But the result in the end could be a very cold winter in southern Europe in 2024-2025. The future speaks for itself!

Thanks for reading my blog, 28-08-2024

#Windmush #Curt

https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *