• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

RealClimate

Climate science from climate scientists...

  • Start here
  • Model-Observation Comparisons
  • Miscellaneous Climate Graphics
  • Surface temperature graphics
You are here: Home / Archives for Climate Science / El Nino

El Nino

El Niño and Global Warming

17 May 2006 by group

By Rasmus Benestad & Raymond Pierrehumbert

This is the first part of a planned mini-series of 3 posts on tropical climate, circulation, and oceanic response in conjunction with a global warming. Climate change related to a global warming is more than just temperature and precipitation -massive atmospheric circulations change too, and these changes can have consequences.

[Read more…] about El Niño and Global Warming

Filed Under: Climate Science, El Nino, Oceans

Global warming on Earth

13 Oct 2005 by Gavin

Translations: (Français)

The Washington Post picked up on the latest update to the 2005 temperature anomaly analysis from NASA GISS. The 2005 Jan-Sep land data (which is adjusted for urban biases) is higher than the previously warmest year (0.76°C compared to the 1998 anomaly of 0.75°C for the same months, and a 0.71°C anomaly for the whole year) , while the land-ocean temperature index (which includes sea surface temperature data) is trailing slightly behind (0.58°C compared to 0.60°C Jan-Sep, 0.56°C for the whole of 1998). The GISS team (of which I am not a part) had predicted that it was likely the 2005 would exceed the 1998 record (when there was a very large El Niño at the beginning of that year) based on the long term trends in surface temperature and the estimated continuing large imbalance in the Earth’s radiation budget.

In 1998 the last three months of the year were relatively cool as the El Niño pattern had faded. For the 2005 global land-ocean index to exceed the annual 1998 record, the mean anomaly needs to stay above 0.51°C for the next three months. Since there was no El Niño this year, and the mean so far is significantly above that, this seems likely. [Read more…] about Global warming on Earth

Filed Under: Climate Science, El Nino, Instrumental Record

Hurricanes and Global Warming – Is There a Connection?

2 Sep 2005 by group

Translations: (Français) (English)

by Stefan Rahmstorf, Michael Mann, Rasmus Benestad, Gavin Schmidt, and William Connolley

On Monday August 29, Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans, Louisiana and Missisippi, leaving a trail of destruction in her wake. It will be some time until the full toll of this hurricane can be assessed, but the devastating human and environmental impacts are already obvious.

Katrina was the most feared of all meteorological events, a major hurricane making landfall in a highly-populated low-lying region. In the wake of this devastation, many have questioned whether global warming may have contributed to this disaster. Could New Orleans be the first major U.S. city ravaged by human-caused climate change?

Filed Under: Climate modelling, Climate Science, El Nino, FAQ, Hurricanes, Instrumental Record, Oceans

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5

Primary Sidebar

Search

Search for:

Email Notification

get new posts sent to you automatically (free)
Loading

Recent Posts

  • Raising Climate Literacy
  • Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • High-resolution ‘fingerprint’ images reveal a weakening Atlantic Ocean circulation (AMOC)
  • Unforced variations: Oct 2025
  • “But you said the ice was going to disappear in 10 years!”
  • Time and Tide Gauges wait for no Voortman

Our Books

Book covers
This list of books since 2005 (in reverse chronological order) that we have been involved in, accompanied by the publisher’s official description, and some comments of independent reviewers of the work.
All Books >>

Recent Comments

  • MA Rodger on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • MA Rodger on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • David on Raising Climate Literacy
  • David on Raising Climate Literacy
  • zebra on Raising Climate Literacy
  • mpcan on High-resolution ‘fingerprint’ images reveal a weakening Atlantic Ocean circulation (AMOC)
  • zebra on Raising Climate Literacy
  • David on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Geoff Miell on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Nigelj on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Atomsk's Sanakan on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Robert Cutler on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Atomsk's Sanakan on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Atomsk's Sanakan on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Susan Anderson on “But you said the ice was going to disappear in 10 years!”
  • Nigelj on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Nigelj on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Susan Anderson on Raising Climate Literacy
  • Toby on “But you said the ice was going to disappear in 10 years!”
  • Susan Anderson on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Ken Towe on Raising Climate Literacy
  • Ken Towe on Raising Climate Literacy
  • MA Rodger on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Barton Paul Levenson on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Geoff Miell on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Geoff Miell on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Dennis Horne on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Geoff Miell on Unforced variations: Nov 2025
  • Ron R. on Raising Climate Literacy
  • Dennis Horne on Unforced variations: Nov 2025

Footer

ABOUT

  • About
  • Translations
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Page
  • Login

DATA AND GRAPHICS

  • Data Sources
  • Model-Observation Comparisons
  • Surface temperature graphics
  • Miscellaneous Climate Graphics

INDEX

  • Acronym index
  • Index
  • Archives
  • Contributors

Realclimate Stats

1,386 posts

11 pages

248,503 comments

Copyright © 2025 · RealClimate is a commentary site on climate science by working climate scientists for the interested public and journalists.