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Does cold weather disprove human-caused climate change?

By John Cook
NO

While local weather can be colder than average on a given day or week, overall temperatures are rising and cold snaps are happening less often. Nineteen of the 20 warmest years since 1880 occurred since 2000, and average global temperatures have risen one degree Celsius since the Industrial Revolution.

This doesn’t mean cold weather will disappear entirely. But isolated occurrences of cold weather do not mean global warming isn’t happening. Weather refers to short-term fluctuations in events such as temperature and precipitation. Climate refers to long-term meteorological trends.

Recent warming is attributable to human-caused greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation, land use changes and the burning of fossil fuels. These gases prevent heat from escaping the atmosphere, warming the planet.

This fact brief is responsive to conversations such as this one.
ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTOR
Skeptical Science is a non-profit science education organization. Our goal is to remove a roadblock to climate action by building public resilience against climate misinformation. We achieve this by publishing debunking of climate myths as well as providing resources for educators, communicators, scientists, and the general public. Skeptical Science was founded and is led by John Cook, a Senior Research Fellow with the Melbourne Centre for Behaviour Change at the University of Melbourne.
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