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SATURDAY, JULY 05, 2025
Arctic warming linked to colder winters, study shows

World+Biz

TBS Report
03 September, 2021, 09:00 am
Last modified: 03 September, 2021, 09:04 am

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Arctic warming linked to colder winters, study shows

Scientists found that heating in the region ultimately disturbed the circular pattern of winds known as the polar vortex

TBS Report
03 September, 2021, 09:00 am
Last modified: 03 September, 2021, 09:04 am
A man walks to his friend's home in a neighborhood without electricity as snow covers the Blackhawk neighborhood in Pflugerville, Texas, February 15, 2021. Bronte Wittpenn/Austin American-Statesman/USA Today Network via REUTERS
A man walks to his friend's home in a neighborhood without electricity as snow covers the Blackhawk neighborhood in Pflugerville, Texas, February 15, 2021. Bronte Wittpenn/Austin American-Statesman/USA Today Network via REUTERS

Increases in extreme winter weather in parts of the US are linked to accelerated warming of the Arctic, a new study has shown.

Scientists found that heating in the region ultimately disturbed the circular pattern of winds known as the polar vortex, reports the BBC.

This allowed colder winter weather to flow down to the US, notably in the Texas cold wave in February.

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The authors say that warming will see more cold winters in some locations.Over the past four decades, satellite records have shown how increasing global temperatures have had a profound effect on the Arctic.

Warming in the region is far more pronounced than in the rest of the world, and has caused a rapid shrinkage of summer sea ice.

Scientists have long been concerned about the implications of this amplification of global change for the rest of the planet.

This new study indicates that the warming in the Arctic is having a significant impact on winter weather in both North America and East Asia. The researchers detail a complex meteorological chain that connects this warmer region to a rotating pattern of cold air known as the polar vortex.

The authors show that the melting of ice in the Barents and Kara seas leads to increased snowfall over Siberia and a transfer of excess energy that impacts the swirling winds in the stratosphere above the North Pole.

The heat ultimately causes a stretching of the vortex which then enables extremely cold weather to flow down to the US. There has been an increase in these stretching events since satellite observations began in 1979.

Scientists believe this vortex stretching process led to the deadly Texas cold wave in February this year.

Top News / USA

climate change / Artic Melting / extreme weather

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