It was pretty inevitable that once the rain finally started to fall in South Eastern Australia, extinguishing some of the bushfires which have been raging for weeks, the wet weather, too, would be blamed on climate change.
‘Climate apocalypse starts in Australia,’ a human rights lawyer tweeted in response to golf ball-sized hailstones falling in Canberra.
‘You’d be hard-pressed to look at what is going on in Australia right now and not connect it to climate change.’ said the website News & Guts, tweeting similar pictures of hailstones falling on the Australian capital.
For the Weather Channel, it was a case of ‘record rains’ – citing by way of example the 60mm of rain which fell in an hour in Newcastle, New South Wales.
Parts of eastern Australia has been pelted by golf-ball sized hail – the storms have helped to fight some bushfires, but many continue to burnhttps://t.co/aaGqbxlEIa pic.twitter.com/VVuWXINivH
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) January 20, 2020
Actually, there is nothing unusual about this week’s heavy rains in Australia.
Sixty mm of rain an hour is a lot, but a quick look through the books reveals that the record for rainfall in an hour in New South Wales is 152 mm, which fell in South Yathong on September 21, 1902 – before even David Attenborough, let alone Greta Thunberg, was born.
As for hailstorms, they are a regular feature of the summer in South-Eastern Australia. Neither does science seem to predict that they will become more common in the future due to rising temperatures.
A paper published in the International Journal of Climatology in 2005 actually predicted a fall in the frequency of hail.
Up until last week, you may remember, forecasters were warning fire-ravaged parts of the country that no significant rainfall was expected before March.
And now?
On Sunday, actor Russell Crowe tweeted two pictures of his estate: one taken just after it had been ravaged by fire and another after it had been revived by this week’s rains. Far from an apocalypse, you could hardly tell from the latter picture that it had ever been burned.
My place 10 weeks ago after the fire had gone through, and this morning after a big weekend of rain. pic.twitter.com/oOWz0gG5hp
— Russell Crowe (@russellcrowe) January 19, 2020
What those erroneous forecasts teach us is that weather continues to defy anyone who attempts to predict it more than a few days ahead, even if they are equipped with impressive supercomputers and all the data in the world.
Weather and climate are not the same things, of course – one is what is happening now, the other the average of what has happened in the past 30 years.
But they are similarly chaotic – which is why we should never take too seriously anyone who says that if we keep carbon emissions to X million tonnes, we will limit the rise in global temperatures by Y degrees.
As with the recent forecast that there would be no significant rain until March, there are bound to be factors we haven’t considered and built into climate models, and there are bound to be errors in how those models are functioning.
This is not an argument, for the benefit of those who keep trying to change my Wikipedia page to add the word ‘denier’ for dismissing the risk of climate change and failing to prepare for a range of possibilities.
The inference of the above is that we could even be underestimating temperatures in a century’s time. But it is to say that we have no real idea, and Greta’s fantastical claim at Davos that we only have eight years to save the Earth is nonsense.
We should trust climatic observations, but take all predictions with a pinch of salt. The only near-certain thing is that they will be wrong.
Read more at Spectator AU
When I was a child living in New Zealand (1950s) SE Australia was notorious for its bush fires and car-window-smashing hail storms. Of course then we thought that was just the way Australia was and always was. We didnt know it was climate change. So why after 60 years has it stayed the same despite all this changing?
Spot on, we lived near the northern NSW town of Inverell and I have the same memories. We also had drought, then a huge damaging flood in 1955 as did a great swathe of the state. The town of Maitland was party washed away. To listen to the Commos one would think none of these WEATHER events ever took place before now. I still scratch my head as to how we went from predicting world wide freezing to world wide roasting in such a short time. WEATHER, was, is and always will be extremely hard to predict.
These screwballs will blame any sort of Weather on Global Warming/Climate Change like blaming Australia’s fires on Global Warming/Climate Change IS is just plain Stupid