Alaska on Climate Change Watch List

Looking for A/C work? Scratch Anchorage off your list. It seems Anchorage is on track for their coldest summer in recorded history. Anchorage Daily News reported today that with summer already half over, only seven days have managed to hit the 65 degree mark. The average is forty-four days per year with temps 65 degrees or higher. Residents of Anchorage consider 65 degrees very nice, and 70 degrees is an outright heatwave. The current forecast predicts more below-normal weather for Alaska. It looks like the CFC ban is working it’s magic.

When I read articles like that I understand why the term “global warming” has been replaced by the phrase “climate change.”

Right now, I’m not sure if it’s high gas prices - or - climate change, but so far it’s been less than stellar here in Indiana. It usually takes three straight days of outright miserable heat for our residents to seek professional help with A/C problems. With days of balmy relief in between the three consecutive days needed, most people are getting by with cranking the windows down .

How have you fared so far this year? We’d all like to know.

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BOUY MEETS GORE
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By INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY | Posted Wednesday, March 26, 2008 4:20 PM PT

Global Warming: Computer models used by environmentalists predict imminent and
disastrous climate change. But actual temperature measurements by high-tech
equipment show something completely different.

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Read More: Global Warming

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An early scene in the sci-fi disaster flick “The Day After Tomorrow,” showing
what allegedly will happen to the planet if we continue to ignore Al Gore’s
warnings on global warming, shows three of the film’s secondary characters at
some kind of scientific station in Scotland. They’re watching as automated data
buoys in the Atlantic Ocean report sudden drops in water temperature resulting from melting Arctic ice stopping the Gulf Stream, which warms the
Northern Hemisphere.

“I don’t understand what’s supposed to be going on,” says one of the three, an
oceanographer.

Apparently neither do the film’s creators, Gore or any of his climate-change
cultists. For actual measurements of actual oceans by actual instruments have
thrown cold water on the theory that such a scenario could ever occur or is in
fact occurring now.

As Lorne Gunter reported Monday in Canada’s National Post, the first of 3,000
new automated ocean buoys were deployed in 2003. They amounted to a significant
improvement over earlier buoys that took their measurements mostly at the
ocean’s surface.

The new buoys, known as Argos, drift along the oceans at a depth of about 6,000
feet constantly monitoring the temperature, salinity and speed of ocean
currents. Every 10 days or so a bladder inflates, bringing to the surface
readings taken at various depths. Once on the surface, they transmit their
readings to satellites that retransmit them to land-based computers.

The Argos buoys have disappointed the global warm-mongers in that they have
failed to detect any signs of imminent climate change. As Dr. Josh Willis, who
works for NASA in its Jet Propulsion Laboratory, noted in an interview with
National Public Radio, “there has been a very slight cooling” over the buoys’
five years of observation, but that drop was “not anything really significant.”
Certainly not enough to shut down the Gulf Stream.

Climate-change promoters also are perplexed by the observations of NASA’s eight
weather satellites. In contrast to some 7,000 land-based stations, they take
more than 300,000 temperature readings daily over the surface of the Earth. In
30 years of operation, the satellites have recorded a warming trend of just
0.14C ? well within the range of normal variations.

In January 2007, folks at the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration
trumpeted the “fact” that 2006 was the warmest year ever recorded in the continental U.S. This was based on daily readings gathered by NOAA’s climate data
center and the 1,221 or so weather observation stations it monitors around the
country.

As we’ve reported, the locations of some of these land-based stations are
suspect. One in Forest Grove, Ore., stands just 10 feet from an air-conditioning
exhaust vent. Another in Roseburg, Ore., is on a rooftop near an
air-conditioning unit. In Tahoe, Calif., one is near a drum where trash is
burned.

If the Argos buoys and satellites had confirmed the greenie computer models and
Gore hype instead of natural temperature variations, it would have been big
news. The silence speaks volumes.

I’ve heard about the suspect locations where thermometers were placed in bad areas

That’s good stuff :-)

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