This page is also available as a printable PDF here.
Key Takeaways:
The phrase “polar vortex” is often erroneously used by the media to link climate change and severe winter weather events.
The polar vortex was first identified as a cause for some instances of severe winter weather events in 1853.
Claims that climate change is creating new and more severe polar vortex events are not supported by either observational evidence or computer climate models.
Short Summary:
Extreme winter weather is often attributed to an atmospheric weather event known as a “polar vortex outbreak” or an “Arctic outbreak.” The Polar Vortex is nothing new: The term first appeared in an 1853 issue of E. Littell’s Living Age.1
According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA):2
The polar vortex is a large circulation of low pressure and cold air that forms every winter in the stratosphere above the North and South poles. The term vortex refers to the counter-clockwise flow of air that helps keep colder air close to the poles (left globe in Figure 1).
Sometimes during winter in the Northern Hemisphere, the polar vortex will become less stable and disrupt the polar jet stream circulating in the same direction miles below the vortex — thus sending cold Arctic air southward over the United States (right globe in Figure 1).
Recently, some climate researchers have cited computer models to attribute specific polar vortex events to climate change. However, there no evidence contained in the long-term observational records that polar vortex events have become more frequent or severe during the recent period of modest warming. In its discussion of the polar vortex, NOAA says computer models fail to produce consistent projections linking climate change and the polar vortex. “Computer models don’t agree on how global warming will affect the polar vortex,” reports NOAA.5,6
Claims that climate change is creating new and more severe polar vortex events are not supported by either observational evidence or computer climate models.
Each polar vortex outbreak is an individual weather event spanning days to a week at any given location, no single one of which can the honestly attributed to climate change, which is a trend measured over thirty years at the minimum.7 Science has observed no increasing trend in polar vortex weather events.
“The Influences of the Model Configuration on the Simulation of Stratospheric Northern-Hemisphere Polar Vortex in the CMIP5 Models,” Advances in Meteorology, Volume 2017, Article ID 7326759, https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/7326759
This page is also available as a printable PDF here.
Key Takeaways:
The phrase “polar vortex” is often erroneously used by the media to link climate change and severe winter weather events.
The polar vortex was first identified as a cause for some instances of severe winter weather events in 1853.
Claims that climate change is creating new and more severe polar vortex events are not supported by either observational evidence or computer climate models.
Short Summary:
Extreme winter weather is often attributed to an atmospheric weather event known as a “polar vortex outbreak” or an “Arctic outbreak.” The Polar Vortex is nothing new: The term first appeared in an 1853 issue of E. Littell’s Living Age.1
According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA):2
The polar vortex is a large circulation of low pressure and cold air that forms every winter in the stratosphere above the North and South poles. The term vortex refers to the counter-clockwise flow of air that helps keep colder air close to the poles (left globe in Figure 1).
Sometimes during winter in the Northern Hemisphere, the polar vortex will become less stable and disrupt the polar jet stream circulating in the same direction miles below the vortex — thus sending cold Arctic air southward over the United States (right globe in Figure 1).
Recently, some climate researchers have cited computer models to attribute specific polar vortex events to climate change. However, there no evidence contained in the long-term observational records that polar vortex events have become more frequent or severe during the recent period of modest warming. In its discussion of the polar vortex, NOAA says computer models fail to produce consistent projections linking climate change and the polar vortex. “Computer models don’t agree on how global warming will affect the polar vortex,” reports NOAA.5,6
Claims that climate change is creating new and more severe polar vortex events are not supported by either observational evidence or computer climate models.
Each polar vortex outbreak is an individual weather event spanning days to a week at any given location, no single one of which can the honestly attributed to climate change, which is a trend measured over thirty years at the minimum.7 Science has observed no increasing trend in polar vortex weather events.
“The Influences of the Model Configuration on the Simulation of Stratospheric Northern-Hemisphere Polar Vortex in the CMIP5 Models,” Advances in Meteorology, Volume 2017, Article ID 7326759, https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/7326759