The bitter winter afflicting much of the Northern Hemisphere is only the start of a global trend towards cooler weather that is likely to last for 20 or 30 years, say some of the world's most eminent climate scientists.
Their predictions - based on an analysis of natural cycles in water temperatures in the Pacific and Atlantic oceans - challenge some of the global warming orthodoxy's most deeply cherished beliefs, such as the claim that the North Pole will be free of ice in
summer by 2013.
According to the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre in Colorado, Arctic summer sea ice has increased by 409,000 square miles, or 26 per cent, since 2007 - and even the most committed global warming activists do not dispute this.

The scientists' predictions also undermine the standard climate computer models, which assert that the warming of the Earth since 1900 has been driven solely by man-made greenhouse gas emissions and will continue as long as carbon dioxide levels rise.
They say that their research shows that much of the warming was caused by oceanic cycles when they were in a 'warm mode' as opposed to the present 'cold mode'.
This challenge to the widespread view that the planet is on the brink of an irreversible catastrophe is all the greater because the scientists could never be described as global warming 'deniers' or sceptics.
However,
both main British political parties continue to insist that the world
is facing imminent disaster without drastic cuts in CO2.

This image of the UK taken from NASA's multi-national Terra satellite on Thursday shows the extent of the freezing weather
Last week, as Britain froze, Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband maintained in a parliamentary answer that the science of global warming was 'settled'.
Among the most prominent of the scientists is Professor Mojib Latif, a leading member of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which has been pushing the issue of man-made global warming on to the international political agenda since it was formed 22 years ago.
Prof Latif, who leads a research team
at the renowned Leibniz Institute at Germany's Kiel University, has
developed new methods for measuring ocean temperatures 3,000ft beneath
the surface, where the cooling and warming cycles start.
He
and his colleagues predicted the new cooling trend in a paper published
in 2008 and warned of it again at an IPCC conference in Geneva last
September.
Last night he told The Mail on Sunday: 'A
significant share of the warming we saw from 1980 to 2000 and at
earlier periods in the 20th Century was due to these cycles - perhaps
as much as 50 per cent.
'They have now gone into reverse, so winters like this one will become much more likely. Summers will also probably be cooler, and all this may well last two decades or longer.
'The extreme retreats that we have seen in glaciers and
sea ice will come to a halt. For the time being, global warming has
paused, and there may well be some cooling.'
As Europe, Asia
and North America froze last week, conventional wisdom insisted that
this was merely a 'blip' of no long-term significance.
Though
record lows were experienced as far south as Cuba, where the daily
maximum on beaches normally used for winter bathing was just 4.5C, the
BBC assured viewers that the big chill was merely short-term 'weather'
that had nothing to do with 'climate', which was still warming.
The work of Prof Latif and the other scientists refutes that view.
On
the one hand, it is true that the current freeze is the product of the
'Arctic oscillation' - a weather pattern that sees the development of
huge 'blocking' areas of high pressure in northern latitudes, driving
polar winds far to the south.
Meteorologists say that this is at its strongest for at least 60 years.
As a result, the jetstream - the high-altitude wind that circles the
globe from west to east and normally pushes a series of wet but mild
Atlantic lows across Britain - is currently running not over the
English Channel but the Strait of Gibraltar.
A composite photograph released last year to highlight the issue of melting ice and global warming
However, according to Prof Latif and his colleagues, this in turn
relates to much longer-term shifts - what are known as the Pacific and
Atlantic 'multi-decadal oscillations' (MDOs).
For Europe,
the crucial factor here is the temperature of the water in the middle
of the North Atlantic, now several degrees below its average when the
world was still warming.
But the effects are not confined to the Northern Hemisphere. Prof Anastasios Tsonis, head of the University of Wisconsin Atmospheric Sciences Group, has recently shown that these MDOs move together in a synchronised way across the globe, abruptly flipping the world's climate from a 'warm mode' to a 'cold mode' and back again in 20 to 30-year cycles.
'They amount to massive
rearrangements in the dominant patterns of the weather,' he said
yesterday, 'and their shifts explain all the major changes in world
temperatures during the 20th and 21st Centuries.
'We have such a change now and can therefore expect 20 or 30 years of cooler temperatures.'
Prof Tsonis said that the period from 1915 to 1940 saw a strong warm mode, reflected in rising temperatures.
Pictures of the snow in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, last week show the city is the coldest it has been since 1970
But from 1940 until the late Seventies, the last MDO cold-mode era,
the world cooled, despite the fact that carbon dioxide levels in the
atmosphere continued to rise.
Many of the consequences of the recent warm mode were also observed 90 years ago.
For example, in 1922, the Washington Post reported that Greenland's glaciers were fast disappearing, while Arctic seals were 'finding the water too hot'.
It interviewed a Captain Martin Ingebrigsten,
who had been sailing the eastern Arctic for 54 years: 'He says that he
first noted warmer conditions in 1918, and since that time it has
gotten steadily warmer.
'Where formerly great masses of ice were found, there are now moraines, accumulations of earth and stones. At many points where glaciers formerly extended into the sea they have entirely disappeared.'
As a result, the shoals of fish that used
to live in these waters had vanished, while the sea ice beyond the
north coast of Spitsbergen in the Arctic Ocean had melted.
Warm Gulf Stream water was still detectable within a few hundred miles of the Pole.
In contrast, Prof Tsonis said, last week 56 per cent of the surface of the United States was covered by snow.
'That
hasn't happened for several decades,' he pointed out. 'It just isn't
true to say this is a blip. We can expect colder winters for quite a
while.'
He recalled that towards the end of the last cold mode, the world's media were preoccupied by fears of freezing.
For
example, in 1974, a Time magazine cover story predicted 'Another Ice
Age', saying: 'Man may be somewhat responsible - as a result of farming
and fuel burning [which is] blocking more and more sunlight from
reaching and heating the Earth.'
Prof Tsonis said: 'Perhaps
we will see talk of an ice age again by the early 2030s, just as the
MDOs shift once more and temperatures begin to rise.'
Like
Prof Latif, Prof Tsonis is not a climate change 'denier'. There is, he
said, a measure of additional 'background' warming due to human
activity and greenhouse gases that runs across the MDO cycles.
'This isn't just a blip. We can expect colder winters for quite a while'
But he added: 'I do not believe in catastrophe theories. Man-made
warming is balanced by the natural cycles, and I do not trust the
computer models which state that if CO2 reaches a particular level then
temperatures and sea levels will rise by a given amount.
'These models cannot be trusted to predict the weather for a week, yet they are running them to give readings for 100 years.'
Prof
Tsonis said that when he published his work in the highly respected
journal Geophysical Research Letters, he was deluged with 'hate
emails'.
He added: 'People were accusing me of wanting to destroy the climate, yet all I'm interested in is the truth.'
He
said he also received hate mail from climate change sceptics, accusing
him of not going far enough to attack the theory of man-made warming.
The work of Profs Latif, Tsonis and their teams raises a crucial question: If some of the late 20th Century warming was caused not by carbon dioxide but by MDOs, then how much?
Tsonis did not give a figure; Latif suggested it could be anything between ten and 50 per cent.
Other critics of the warming orthodoxy say the role played by MDOs is even greater.
William
Gray, emeritus Professor of Atmospheric Sciences at Colorado State
University, said that while he believed there had been some background
rise caused by greenhouse gases, the computer models used by advocates
of man-made warming had hugely exaggerated their effect.

Dr David Viner stands by his claim that snow will become an 'increasingly rare event'
According to Prof Gray, these distort the way the atmosphere works.
'Most of the rise in temperature from the Seventies to the Nineties was
natural,' he said. 'Very little was down to CO2 - in my view, as little
as five to ten per cent.'
But last week, die-hard warming advocates were refusing to admit that MDOs were having any impact.
In March 2000, Dr David Viner, then a member of the University of East Anglia Climatic Research Unit, the body now being investigated over the notorious 'Warmergate' leaked emails, said that within a few years snowfall would become 'a very rare and exciting event' in Britain, and that 'children just aren't going to know what snow is'.
Now
the head of a British Council programme with an annual £10 million
budget that raises awareness of global warming among young people
abroad, Dr Viner last week said he still stood by that prediction:
'We've had three weeks of relatively cold weather, and that doesn't
change anything.
'This winter is just a little cooler than average, and I still think that snow will become an increasingly rare event.'
The longer the cold spell lasts, the harder it may be to persuade the public of that assertion.





I've got three words for you Mann-made global warming relgionists: read Lord Monckton.
The 10,000,000 pound budget says it all. Money talks.
This is sorting out the real scientists from the political science-for-sale political consultants.
Any genuine scientist will be unable to avoid questioning why IPCC predictions are so wrong and will be prompted to start looking for the answers.
The well-funded Dr Viner and ilk would be mad to walk away from all that money until they've bled the last possible dollar from the public and other funders.
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