Yeah, the seas are rising. /s
No More Snow?
For well over a decade now, climate alarmists have been claiming that snow would soon become a thing of the past. In March 2000, for example, senior research scientist David Viner, working at the time for the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia, told the U.K. Independent that within a few years, snowfall would become a very rare and exciting event in Britain. Children just arent going to know what snow is, he was quoted as claiming in the article, headlined Snowfalls are now just a thing of the past.
The very next year, snowfall across the United Kingdom increased by more than 50 percent. In 2008, perfectly timed for a global warming legislation debate in Parliament, London saw its first October snow since 1934 or possibly even 1922, according to the U.K. Register. It is unusual to have snow this early, a spokesperson for the alarmist U.K. Met office admitted to The Guardian newspaper. By December of 2009, London saw its heaviest levels of snowfall in two decades. In 2010, the coldest U.K. winter since records began a century ago blanketed the islands with snow.
In early 2004, the CRUs Viner and other self-styled experts warned that skiing in Scotland would soon become just a memory, thanks to alleged global warming. Unfortunately, its just getting too hot for the Scottish ski industry, Viner told The Guardian. Another expert, Adam Watson with the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, told the paper that the skiing industry in Scotland had less than two decades left to go. Yet in 2013, too much snow kept many Scottish resorts closed. Nevis Range, The Lecht, Cairngorm, Glenshee and Glencoe all remain closed today due to the heavy snow, reported OnTheSnow.com on January 4, 2013. Ironically, by 2014, the BBC, citing experts, reported that the Scottish hills had more snow than at any point in seven decades. It also reported that the Nevis Range ski resort could not operate some of its lifts because they were still buried under unprecedented amounts of snow.
The IPCC has also been relentlessly hyping the snowless winter scare, along with gullible or agenda-driven politicians. In its 2001 Third Assessment Report, for example, the IPCC claimed milder winter temperatures will decrease heavy snowstorms. Again, though, the climate refused to cooperate. The year 2013, the last year for which complete data is available, featured the fourth-highest levels on record, according to data from Rutgers Universitys Global Snow Lab. Spring snow cover was the highest in a decade, while data for the fall indicate that it was the fifth highest ever recorded. Last December, meanwhile, brought with it a new high record in Northern Hemisphere snow cover, Global Snow Lab data show.