A recent Washington Post article about dogsledding in Michigan claims that human-caused climate change has reduced the season for racing due to warmer temperatures and less snowpack. [bold, links added]
Data shows that there is no declining trend of snow cover across North America during the fall and winter seasons.
The article, ‘Climate change is causing Michigan dogsledders to shift gears from snow to dry land’, wrongly places the blame on anthropogenic (human-caused) climate change.
Washington Post writes:
“Richard Rood, a professor of climate science at the University of Michigan, said that principally because of man-made climate change, Michigan’s cold seasons are different now — and, in portions of southern parts of the state, winters are often wetter.
…
This may sound like the end of an era, with dogsledding fading away in southern Michigan as the snow edges north.
Prognostications that the “end of snow” is near have been made ad nauseum over the past three decades, and they’ve all proven wrong. As discussed by Climate Realism, predictions of declining snowfall always depend on model projections.
Real-world data on measured snowfall and trends refute these fearmongering claims.
Just this year, for example, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) predicted the maximum ice cover in the Great Lakes would barely reach 13 percent.
Reality rebuffed NOAA’s modeling, when ice coverage peaked at almost 60 percent coverage, as seen in Figure 1 below.
High ice years on the Great Lakes are not only still possible but have occurred regularly, including recent years of near record-breaking ice coverage.
As shown in Figure 2 below, NOAA’s Great Lakes Surface Environment Analysis (GLSEA) data shows only a minor decline in ice coverage since 1975.
Snowfall in that region is tied closely to the Great Lakes’ ice coverage, due to the “lake effect”. Lake effect snow is reduced during years of high ice cover, as less lake water can evaporate into the West to East wind to create snow because of the ice cap over the water.
Ice coverage on the Great Lakes is weather dependent: as can be seen in Figure 2 above, there are wide swings from year to year. This is a weather-related event, not climate; colder winters in the Great Lakes lead to less snow.
There may be a local reduction of snow in some parts of Michigan, but data from the Global Snow Lab at Rutgers University demonstrates that the average snow extent in North America has increased during the fall and winter over time, refuting the claim that snow is “edging north.”
This data is reflected in Figures 3 and 4 below.
Data from Rutgers shows snow cover anomalies in North America also see moderately increasing trends September through February.
Interestingly, even the study Washington Post cites says that while the average temperature of Michigan has raised by about two degrees Fahrenheit since 1951, it also says Michigan should see snowier winters in the near term due to the lake effect.
From the study:
Reduced lake ice cover and enhanced evaporation may lead to increased lake-effect snowfall in the near term, but rising temperatures will cause more winter precipitation to fall as rain as opposed to snow across the region by late century.
…
Annual average ice cover on the Great Lakes underwent a shift from higher amounts prior to the 1990s to lower amounts in recent decades. There remains strong year-to-year variability, and high ice years are still possible. Lake-effect snowfall has increased in northern areas and may continue to increase through mid-century.
Based on available data, there is no cause to fear for the future of dogsledding, especially in northern Michigan. The Washington Post cherry-picked statements from a study and ignored the rest.
Journalists should avoid attributing every ephemeral change in local weather to global warming, aka “climate change”.
Read more at Climate Realism
The author deliberately left out the Rutgers University snow lab Spring snow chart which shows a sharp decline since the 1960s. When you combine all three charts – Fall, Winter and Spring — the total North American snowfall has a slight downtrend.
By deleting the Spring chart, there appears to v be a significant snow uptrend because the author deliberately lied, and should never be trusted again.
I have lived in Southeastern Michigan for 45 years.
This winter had the least snow, by far, in those 45 years.
We love global warming here.
In our Northern Peninsula, where few people live, there is always more snow and colder weather. If there was ever not enough snow for sled racing, so what? Leave those dogs alone — they are not slaves !
Once again the Washington Compost like the New York Slimes tries to scare their readers and subcribers with fake news