A controversial theory linking climate change to Arctic cold snaps, explained

Advertisement

Advertise with us

The capricious start to the winter season has already seen dramatic temperature swings across much of Canada, with energy grid-disrupting cold snaps giving way to an ice-thawing warm spell.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 31/01/2024 (896 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

The capricious start to the winter season has already seen dramatic temperature swings across much of Canada, with energy grid-disrupting cold snaps giving way to an ice-thawing warm spell.

Scientists agree on how climate change, driven by the burning of fossil fuels, is altering winter globally – the season is getting warmer and shorter, studies suggest the snowpack is thinning out earlier across large parts of Southern Canada, and the Far North is warming faster than the rest of the world.

Cold snaps, like the one felt across the country earlier this month, are not changing those overall trends, scientists say.

The capricious start to the winter season has already seen dramatic temperature swings across much of Canada, with energy-grid-disrupting cold snaps giving way to an ice-thawing warm spell. A woman manoeuvres an uncleared sidewalk in Montreal, Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi
The capricious start to the winter season has already seen dramatic temperature swings across much of Canada, with energy-grid-disrupting cold snaps giving way to an ice-thawing warm spell. A woman manoeuvres an uncleared sidewalk in Montreal, Wednesday, Jan. 10, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christinne Muschi

But there is a controversial idea that suggests rapid warming in the Far North could actually be linked to outbreaks of Arctic air.

The theory suggests that the overall warming trend for winters may continue, but would be punctuated by lashes of Arctic cold, possibly stretching further south than before. While the science underpinning the idea is far from settled, one of the theory’s leading exponents says it could help explain some of the wild swings in weather seen recently.

“There’s a lot of resistance to it, because I think it’s so non-intuitive,” said Judah Cohen, a research affiliate with MIT, who works as a director of seasonal forecasting at Verisk AER.

“But with the way Arctic change is occurring right now, I’d say there’s more disruption in the polar vortex and we have these competing or conflicting influences … There’s more volatility in winter weather, it’s more easier to go from record warm to record cold back to record warm.”

Some of the scientists most publicly skeptical of the theory include research scientist Michael Sigmond and his colleagues with the Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis, a group housed under the federal government. Members of the group based out of Victoria, B.C., have co-authored several papers and letters in scientific journals raising their critiques.

Despite being hotly debated, however, the theory offers a look at how a warming planet and continued cold snaps may not be as contradictory as they may first appear.

THE THEORY

Key to understanding the theory is the polar jet stream – the ribbon of strong atmospheric winds circling the north. One of the factors driving the jet stream is the temperature difference between cold Arctic air and mid-latitude warm air to the south.

American climate scientist Jennifer Francis and her co-authors, whose work in the early 2010s introduced the theory, have argued that as the north-south temperature difference gets smaller, jet stream winds slow down. As that happens, the jet stream is more likely to be deflected off course, leading to wider outbreaks of cold air.

Kent Moore, a professor of atmospheric physics at the University of Toronto, called the theory a “novel twist” on how scientists had typically thought about planetary waves.

“In the past, maybe a jet stream undulation would only get as far south as say, Winnipeg, now it’s getting as far south as Texas,” he said.

“That larger undulation is proposed to be one of the effects of climate change.”

Another theory, this one tied to Cohen, arrives at a similar conclusion, but following a different path. He looks to the polar vortex, a strong band of wind circling higher than the jet stream and above the North Pole.

Cohen and his colleagues suggest less sea ice and more snow cover across parts of the Far North, both linked to faster warming, are exaggerating certain west to east temperature contrasts. Those contrasts generate more energy in atmospheric pressure waves.

Those bigger waves, he suggests, are more likely to disrupt the polar vortex, stretching it out like a rubber band and increasing the likelihood of severe winter weather.

In January, frigid conditions stretched Alberta’s energy grid, leading the operator to urge people to conserve energy at peak times and warn of possible rolling blackouts. In British Columbia, residents weathered a chilling cold snap and snowfall that has since given way to double digit highs and heavy rain.

Cohen says his theory played out as predicted in recent weather patterns.

“This is textbook.”

THE PUSHBACK

The ideas have both been hotly contested.

Sigmond, the Canadian research scientist, says the disruptions in the polar vortex and the jet stream could both be explained by natural variations in the climate system, rather than pinning it on human-caused climate change.

“Because the time series of the observations are very short, it’s almost impossible to determine which part of those trends are due to internal variability, or which part is due to climate change,” he said.

He said the trend in increased jet stream waviness, observed between the 1990s and early 2010s, has recently stopped and even reversed. This, he said, suggests it may have just been “a fluke, like a result of natural variability.”

One of Sigmond’s colleagues, Russell Blackport, has published a number of studies putting cold water on the theory.

In one study from 2021, Blackport and his co-author suggest there might be a connection between sea ice loss and midlatitude winter climate extremes but it is far weaker than others suggest and may be better explained by changes in atmospheric circulation. Another 2020 paper by the duo suggests that even as sea ice loss and Artic warming has accelerated, there has not been more frequent or widespread cold extremes.

“It does annoy me sometimes,” Sigmond said of the theory re-emerging following bouts of extreme cold.

“What’s more relevant is to realize that we are living in climate crisis and scientists agree on that. There is many things that scientists agree on. This is not one of them.”

THE IMPACT

For Cohen, the theory comes down to helping make better weather predictions.

“These ideas help make a better forecast,” he said.

Better forecasts can help decision makers, from operators of energy grids to homeless shelters, better prepare for extreme weather, he said. In the long-term, figuring out whether climate change contributes to cold snaps can also help communities make more informed choices about their climate resilience, especially in places unaccustomed to extreme cold.

“Maybe when you’re planning, you say, ‘well, climate change says we need to focus on tornadoes, hurricanes and heat waves, and I don’t need to be worried about Arctic outbreaks. That’s going to become a thing of the past.’ Maybe my research says, you know what? Not so fast,” Cohen said.

Sigmond, on the other hand, suggests misattribution of climate change to outbreaks of extreme cold could also lead to climate inaction.

For example, warmer winters are expected to increase the survival rate of certain pests. Those concerns may be overlooked if people think climate change will lead to outbreaks of extreme cold capable of wiping out those pests.

“That is a problem,” he said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 31, 2024.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

tv talk shows

1 minute read Preview

tv talk shows

1 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Jimmy Kimmel: Seth Rogen, Willow, guest host Ike Barinholtz

Jimmy Fallon: Zendaya, Chrissy Metz

Comics Unleashed: Ester Steinberg, Cam Bertrand, Affion Crockett, Paul Virzi

Seth Meyers: Jon Bernthal (above), Stephanie Hsu

Read
2:00 AM CDT

What a way to fly — if you’re rich

Pam Frampton 5 minute read Preview

What a way to fly — if you’re rich

Pam Frampton 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

When my husband and I were catching a flight from Roatán, Honduras, to Toronto earlier this year, we shared a taxi to the airport with an acquaintance.

He was an amiable guy and we made small talk. I noticed he got jostled travelling over the bumpy island roads same as we did, even though he was one of those annoyingly well-put-together travellers who seemed unfazed by the crushing humidity that was making my hair stick to my neck and forehead. Perhaps he was wearing one of those breathable fabrics that wicks away moisture.

And though I had heard he had travelled to many parts of the world, I noticed his luggage wasn’t quite as “seasoned” as ours.

We shook hands at departures, and the light rhythmic whir of his pristine wheelie bag quickly faded as he melted into the throng at Juan Manuel Gálvez International Airport while we were still gathering our bags.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Gold mine accused of sparking wildfire that caused evacuations

Erik Pindera 5 minute read Preview

Gold mine accused of sparking wildfire that caused evacuations

Erik Pindera 5 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 2:11 PM CDT

A Lynn Lake-area gold mine is being sued over a massive wildfire that burned more than 210,000 acres last spring, causing evacuations as the flames closed in on the community.

Provincial conservation officials alleged in court documents filed last year the wildfire started May 7, 2025, after a controlled burn pile reignited at Alamos Gold Inc., located about 7.5 kilometres northeast of Lynn Lake. The blaze spread to within five kilometres of the small northern community.

A Manitoba government spokesman said Monday the fire remains under investigation.

The wildfire led to the late May 2025 evacuations of Lynn Lake, home to nearly 600 residents and located about 800 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, and Marcel Colomb First Nation.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 2:11 PM CDT

Snubbing wife’s desire for ‘sexercise’ not good sign

Maureen Scurfield 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

DEAR MISS LONELYHEARTS: With my encouragement, my chubby wife lost 45 pounds over the winter and spring. She also joined an all-female running group.

Last night she had the nerve to tell me she needs more sex as part of her physical rejuvenation. That turns me off somewhat — like I’m one of her exercise machines.

But if I don’t join her in her “more sex” campaign, would she be hurt and depressed and then gain back all the weight? She’s become really attractive-looking again, like she looked before she had our kids. She could actually probably get another guy if she tried.

If I knew she would become so sexual and demanding, I wouldn’t have bugged her to take the weight off. I was complaining about this to a friend I golf with, who is on his second wife and knows everything about cheating.

Cyclist struck, critically injured in North End

1 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 12:57 PM CDT

A cyclist was critically injured Monday night after colliding with a vehicle near the intersection of Dufferin Avenue and Salter Street.

Police responded to the scene shortly after 6 p.m. and found the cyclist seriously injured. They were transported to the hospital and remain in critical condition, Winnipeg Police Service Const. Pat Saydak said Tuesday.

Police did not provide additional information. The investigation is ongoing.

Man armed with ‘edged weapon’ dies after dispute in Linden Woods home

Scott Billeck 6 minute read Preview

Man armed with ‘edged weapon’ dies after dispute in Linden Woods home

Scott Billeck 6 minute read Updated: Yesterday at 4:21 PM CDT

The family of a 42-year-old Winnipeg man shot and killed by police in Linden Woods on Monday night says the incident raises troubling questions about how officers respond to people in mental-health crisis.

“Their reaction to mental health is my concern,” said the man’s sister-in-law, Erica Smith, who spoke outside her brother-in-law’s Avon Gate home on Tuesday. She said her brother-in-law struggled with his mental health.

“It didn’t have to end like this,” she said, fighting back tears. “It could have ended differently.”

Police said officers encountered the man armed with an “edged weapon” at the home when they arrived shortly before 10:30 p.m.

Read
Updated: Yesterday at 4:21 PM CDT