The Daily Mail and Telegraph get it wrong on Arctic sea ice, again | Dana Nuccitelli
Coverage of a recent paper on Arctic sea ice and climate change suggests conservative media can't seem to grasp the concept of long-term trends
Cherry-picking is one of the five telltale techniques of climate change denial. By focusing on short-term blips in noisy data, those who want to maintain the status quo can distract from the long-term threats posed by climate change. Climate contrarians most frequently deploy this strategy using global temperature and Arctic sea ice data.
A recent study in Nature Geoscience concluded that, not surprisingly, there is a strong relationship between the summer temperatures in the Arctic (specifically the number of "melting degree days"), and the amount of sea ice that melts in a given year. 2013 happened to be a relatively cool year in the Arctic - the coolest since 2004. As a result, there was relatively little ice melt in 2013. The annual minimum Arctic sea ice extent and volume were their largest since at least 2009, or perhaps as far back as 2005, according to the data used in this new study.
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